- Jacob's Ladder (film)
Infobox Film
name = Jacob's Ladder
director =Adrian Lyne
producer = Alan Marshall
Bruce Joel Rubin
writer =Bruce Joel Rubin
starring =Tim Robbins
Elizabeth Peña
Danny Aiello
Jason Alexander
Ving Rhames
music =Maurice Jarre
cinematography =Jeffrey L. Kimball
editing =Tom Rolf
distributor =TriStar Pictures
released =November 2 , 1990
runtime = 115 mins
language = English
budget = $25 million [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0099871/ Jacob's Ladder (1990/I) ] ]
preceded_by =
followed_by =
amg_id = 1:25743
imdb_id = 0099871"Jacob's Ladder" is a 1990
psychological horror film directed byAdrian Lyne , based on ascreenplay byBruce Joel Rubin . It starsTim Robbins ,Elizabeth Peña ,Danny Aiello , andJason Alexander . ActorMacaulay Culkin appears briefly in an uncredited performance that predates his wider fame.Plot
The film opens on
October 6 1971 . Jacob Singer (Tim Robbins ) is a U.S. soldier in theMekong Delta ,Vietnam . Helicopters pass overhead, carrying supplies for what appears to be preparation for a bigViet Cong offensive. Without any warning, Jacob's unit comes under fire. The soldiers try to take cover, but begin to exhibit strange behavior for no apparent reason. Jacob tries to escape the unexplained insanity, only to bebayonet ted by an unseen enemy.The film shifts between Vietnam, to Jacob's memories (and delusions) of his son Gabe (
Macaulay Culkin , uncredited) and former wife Sarah (Patricia Kalember ), to his present (this timeframe is set in 1977) relationship with a woman named Jezebel (Elizabeth Peña ) inNew York City . During this time, Jacob faces several threats to his life and has severe hallucinatory experiences. It is revealed that his son Gabe was hit by a car and killed while Jacob was in Vietnam.Jacob's friend and
chiropractor Louis (Danny Aiello ) states the main thematic point of the film: in effect,hell is reallypurgatory , and those who are ready to let go of their lives do not find the experience 'hellish'. It is at this point in the movie that Louis cites the14th century Christian mysticMeister Eckhart .As the hallucinations become increasingly bizarre, Jacob learns about chemical experiments performed on U.S. soldiers in Vietnam. His surviving platoon-mates confess to Jacob that they have been seeing horrible hallucinations as well. Jacob loses an army buddy in a car-ignition explosion while reaching down to pick up a quarter. Jacob is then approached by a man named Michael Newman (
Matt Craven ), who claims to have been a chemist working with the Army'schemical warfare division inSaigon where he worked on creating adrug that would increaseaggression in soldiers. Tests of the drug (code-named "The Ladder" in reference to the effect) were first given tomonkey s and then to a group of enemy POWs, with gruesome results. Later small doses of "The Ladder" were given to Jacob's unit, through the platoons'C-ration s. However, instead of targeting the enemy, the men in Jacob's unit attacked each other indiscriminately.We finally learn that Jacob never made it out of Vietnam; the entire series of experiences turns out to have been a dying hallucination. Jacob's experiences appear to have been a form of purgation in which he releases himself from his earthly attachments, finally joining his dead son Gabe to ascend a staircase toward a bright light.
At the end of the film, a message states that the
U.S. Army allegedly experimented with ahallucinogen ic drug called BZ, but the Pentagon denies it.Evaluation
"The Ladder"
Jacob is told that the horrific events he experienced on his final day in Vietnam were the product of an experimental drug called "The Ladder", which was used on troops without their knowledge. This is an ambiguous element in the film, particularly since Jacob is given the information by a character in his own imagination. He is told that the drug was named for its ability to cause "a fast trip straight down the ladder, right to the primal fear, right to the base anger," although the name "The Ladder" also has a metaphorical and religious significance beyond this, which is relevant to Jacob's predicament: it is notable that he ends his hallucination on a staircase.
At the end of the film, a message is displayed mentioning the testing of a drug named BZ,
NATO code for adeliriant and hallucinogen known as 3-quinuclidinyl benzilate that was rumored to have been administered to U.S. troops by the government in a secret attempt to increase their fighting power. The effects of BZ, however, are different from the effects of the drug depicted in the film.Innovative effects
Director Adrian Lyne uses a
body horror technique in which an actor is recorded waving his head around at a low frame rate, resulting in horrific fast motion when played back. Filmmakers have since achieved the effect by digitally removing frames from footage shot at a normal rate.Fact|date=October 2007The horror videogame franchise "
Silent Hill " borrows this technique in the second, third and fourth sequels of the game, although it is not seen in the "Silent Hill" movie. Other films to use the "fast-head" motion include "Stir of Echoes ", ', "The Ring", "Oldboy ", "Trauma" (2004), "House on Haunted Hill" (1999), "Lost Highway ", "Lost Souls", "The Amityville Horror " (2005), "The Deaths of Ian Stone ", and the "Saw" series, as well as the videogame '.The effect also appears in an episode of the television series "Supernatural" and in the "
The X-Files " episode "Requiem". The music video for "Stupify " byDisturbed , theLinkin Park song "Papercut", "Payback " by Flaw,Marilyn Manson 's cover of "Personal Jesus ", "UHF" byWeird Al Yankovic and "Sober" by Tool also use the technique.Antecedents
The movie's events are a dying hallucination related by an
unreliable narrator . DirectorRobert Enrico used a similar structure for his 1962 film short "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge", based onAmbrose Bierce 's 1886 short story, and which appeared on Americantelevision as a 1964 episode of the fantasy-anthology series "The Twilight Zone". A similar dying hallucination occurs in the short story "The South".The film is also viewed by many, including the screenwriter, as a modern interpretation of "
Bardo Thodol ", theTibet anBook of the Dead . [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE7DE1E38F93BA15753C1A966958260 FILM; Up 'Jacob's Ladder' And Into the Hell Of a Veteran's Psyche - New York Times ] ]ee also
* "Sole Survivor"
* "Stay"
* "The Jacket "
* "The Sixth Sense "
* "The Secret Miracle "
* "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge "
* "The Third Policeman "
*Twist ending Footnotes
External links
*
*
*
*
*
* [http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19901101&slug=1101695 "Seattle Times" article]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.