|
Director/writer Matthew Carnahan does a sharp and effective job of portraying the dead-end teens, particularly in showing the disparity between Scott Bairstow and his parents his stepfathers authoritarianism and mother Dee Wallaces earnestly well-meaning attempts to bridge the gap between them. The film becomes shocking when the violence explodes during the scene where the security guard is beaten and then the murder in the woods. The film is fired up by an intensely compelling performance from Eric Mabius. We see him swinging, quite plausibly, between a control freak with a charismatic ability to persuade and command others, yet at the same time see a wheedlingly needy desire to be wanted and looked up to by them as well. There is the superbly telling moment where the sycophantic Chad Lindberg brings him an electric guitar and he gives up after a few tentative attempts to start playing and angrily remonstrates: I dont want to take lessons I want to be in a band. He is never more fascinating than the scene where they are found trespassing in a neighbours pool and emerges in swimming trunks as the neighbour appears holding a gun, challenging the neighbour to shoot him, saying he is not afraid even of death. The film makes fascinating contrast to a number of other films listed on this site that deal with Satanism and the occult. Unlike these others, Black Circle Boys does not see the Satanism being practiced as having any spiritual or supernatural reality. Rather it sees belief in Satanism as a power outlet for dissolute teens, as something gleaned out of an interest in heavy metal music. The film makes fascinating contrast to the non-fiction documentary Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills (1996) and its sequel Revelations: Paradise Lost 2 (1999), concerning the trial and sentencing of three West Memphis, Arkansas teenagers, Jason Baldwin, Damien Echols and Jessie Miskelly Jr, for supposedly killing two boys in a Satanic ritual, where, as the documentary brought out, the three were sentenced more because of the religious superstition of the Christian locals towards the boys who were Goth and practiced Wicca than the shaky legal evidence for their guilt. Comparison brings out some interesting disparities between the two films whereas Black Circle Boys assumes that the teens are way out of control and did engage in Satanic rituals and murder; the Paradise Lost films raise the much more challenging possibility that all that is on show is bored teenagers with a penchant for unconventional dress and the considerable possibility that any notion of Satanic murders is something that exists entirely in the superstitions of the townspeople around them.
(Nominee for Best Actor (Eric Mabius) at this sites Best of 1997 Awards).
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||