“American History X” begins as a movie about protecting your own and ends pretty much the same way. In the middle and throughout, however, Director Tony Kaye presents a stirring drama about racism, searching for meaning in all the wrong places, and how far even the vilest have to fall to rediscover the right path. The film presents Edward Norton as we have never seen him, struggling to make sense out of a series of events that have plagued his family, and presents a focused look at the power that hate can have as it struggles to maintain its violent grip.
“American History X” is not a subtle movie, imbuing its message through hard lessons and images. And it’s not always an easy message to swallow. There’s Seth (Ethan Suplee), an angry neo-Nazi who drives his pickup truck through town signing, “The White Man Marches On” and spends his time trying to impart their leader Cameron’s (Stacy Keach) message to young Daniel Vineyard (Edward Furlong). And then there’s a violent raid by Cameron’s group on a Korean supermarket for hiring “Border Jumpers,” and a fateful encounter Daniel’s brother Derek (Edward Norton) has with a group of black gang members that would change his life forever.
Edward Norto
“American History X” is a smart movie, not casting Derek alone in his hate but part of a larger system he helped create. There’s his girlfriend (Fairuza Balk), who is also a skinhead, attending secret parking lot meetings and rallies at their headquarters, and demonizing Vineyard’s sister (Jennifer Lien) as a ‘liberal hypocrite.’ The film also goes back farther, showing Derek’s upbringing under his father (William Russ in a 180-degree departure from the loving father of TV’s “Boy Meets World”), who instilled in him at a young age the notion that white people need to stick up for themselves among a nation of ‘freeloaders’ and Affirmative Action.
“American History X” is a sterling example of showing and not telling as we view Derek’s transformation from angry hate-filled young man to a man capable of rebirth. Early scenes involving his gang of white supremacists are well done and poignant in their utter lack of moralizing. However, later scenes, such as inside prison as he struggles first to survive and then to live with himself, are equally poignant, showing the end result of his anger and hate as he starts to realize, for the first time in his life, that he may have been wrong.
“American History X’s” script is nothing short of enthralling, but the real gem here is the acting by all involved. Norton will both terrify you and captivate you as Derek Vineyard, while Edward Furlong goes a long way to shed his coming-of-age youngster from “Terminator 2: Judgment Day” as impressionable teenager Daniel. Neo-Nazi players such as Ethan Suplee and Fairuza Balk nail their roles with scary precision, led at the forefront by Stacy Keach as their manipulative leader Cameron Alexander. Additionally, others round out the drama, such as Beverly D’Angelo as Derek and Daniel’s mother, who tries to hold a family together while questioning what she did so wrong as a parent to lead Derek down such an ugly road.
– by Mark Ziobro
1 Comment
I agree with the review glad you got one right for a change