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Home > Entertainment News > Hollywood News > Article > Movie Review 12 Years a Slave

Movie Review: 12 Years a Slave

Updated on: 31 January,2014 06:34 PM IST  | 
Mihir Fadnavis |

While it is a hard-hitting look at history, it's not director Steve McQueen's best work

Movie Review: 12 Years a Slave

12 Years a Slave
A: Drama
Director: Steve McQueen
Cast: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender


12 Years a Slave is a tough watch. It’s depressing, distressing, gloomy, violent, brilliantly acted in and shot. It’s also a little overrated and director Steve McQueen’s least impressive film to date. It’s only expected that a well-directed film about slavery would be lapped up by the American press. But since we’re not directly involved with that aspect of history, it allows us to look at the film a more objectively.



In the opening minutes of 12 Years a Slave, we’re shown a slave being whipped mercilessly. It’s a shocking, brutal scene that makes you cringe in your seat. Now here’s the problem — the film makes its point in this scene, and proceeds to whip us with the same point over and over again through the rest of its runtime. This is not the Steve McQueen we know and love. His movies are not supposed to be predictable. McQueen’s films are arresting, but never repetitive. And even in the repeated sequences like in Shame, McQueen develops character arcs that show us something new about his subject. He fails to do so in this movie.

That said, 12 Years a Slave is a great acting showcase for its cast. It’s poetic justice that Chiwetel Ejiofor had a minor but important role in Spielberg’s Amistad, which dealt with a similar subject. He’s going to win the Oscar, but the guy who really deserves the accolade is Michael Fassbender, who renders a raging performance of a vile slave owner. Fassbender has worked with McQueen in all of his films and this is the actor clearly at the top of his game. He’s ruthless, sickening, and perverse and completely believable. Lupita Nyong’o makes a great debut, and there are a few quiet cameos from bigwigs like Brad Pitt, Paul Giammatti, Paul Dano and Benedict Cumberbatch, but Fassbender blows everyone away.

McQueen and his DOP Sean Bobbit deserve credit for making the film look epic despite the small budget — they used just two cameras, natural lighting and real locations for the film. But it’s impossible to not be disappointed by the lack of MCQueen’s trademark uniqueness. There was a fifteen minute long, uncut single shot interrogation scene in McQueen’s Hunger. There were long tracking shots of Fassbender running in Shame. These images are ingrained in our memories forever, but there’s nothing of that sort to be found in 12 Years a Slave.

Moreover, the music by Hans Zimmer is extremely reminiscent of Harry Escot’s main theme from Shame. Some of the plot points are a tad clichéd, and the final scene is full of saccharine, coming dangerously close to mawkish territory. That makes it a well-made and well-acted movie that’ll win a lot of awards, but one that is merely ordinary, given the talent driving it. But an ordinary film from McQueen is still better than most of the stuff out there.

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