Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 14 May

By May 14, 2025No Comments

The Fall (Tarsem, 2006)

Lee Pace and Catina Uteri in Tarsem's 2006 masterpiece, The Fall.

In Monday’s review of Forgive Us All, I men­tioned that we had recently watched anoth­er film that was entirely self-funded by the film­makers, Tarsem’s The Fall from 2006.

As it was only men­tioned in passing, I thought I should give it the treat­ment here today (espe­cially as it is one of the few films I have allot­ted five stars to on Letterboxd).

I’m hesti­tant, though, to go into too much detail here because the exper­i­ence of watch­ing the film for the first time is so mind-blowing. Also, that “mind-blowing” isn’t just idle hyper­bole. You prob­ably haven’t seen any­thing on this scale of pro­duc­tion or ima­gin­a­tion since the silent era – an appro­pri­ate com­par­is­on because that hap­pens to be the world of the film.

Lee Pace plays Roy Walker, para­lysed after a stunt goes wrong and deeply depressed over both the loss of the use of his legs and the loss of his girl­friend to the film’s star.

Also in the hos­pit­al is a five-year-old girl named Alexandria (Catinca Untaru) whose arm is in plaster fol­low­ing a fall while orange pick­ing with her migrant fam­ily. Roy befriends Alexandria in the hope that she might be able to source some drugs that will end his pain and in order to do so he starts spin­ning tales of fant­ast­ic adven­tures and romance, even­tu­ally tak­ing on the role – in Alexandria’s ima­gin­a­tion – of the Masked Bandit himself.

The film comes and goes between the tra­gic fig­ure of Roy and his hero­ic alter-ego, lead­ing a col­our­ful band of brig­ands on a quest for revenge on the evil Governor Odious (played by the same act­or who plays Roy’s movie star nemes­is – Daniel Caltagirone).

Writer-director Tarsem Singh was a top dir­ect­or of TV com­mer­cials and music videos in the days when there were for­tunes to be made from them. When he was unable to get this film fin­anced tra­di­tion­ally, he simply decided to throw all his sav­ings at simply film­ing the “present day” sec­tions, on loc­a­tion in South Africa stand­ing in for Hollywood.

After that, as fin­ances per­mit­ted (and often piggy-backing on loc­a­tions and crews from his com­mer­cials), he would shoot the fantasy sequences, trav­el­ling the world to find the most extraordin­ary loc­a­tions. Almost everything is prac­tic­al. Of those places – Indian palaces, Himalayan deserts, Balinese beaches, Fijian reefs, there are over 20 coun­tries lis­ted on IMDb – many are phys­ic­ally, cul­tur­ally or his­tor­ic­ally inac­cess­ible but some­how Tarsem’s immense charm got him access. It took four years.

The back­grounds are one thing, but the design of what’s in front of them is anoth­er. Eiko Ishioka’s cos­tume design – mostly arrived at before there was a script – is simply sump­tu­ous and should be a remind­er to design­ers every­where that there is no rule that you must be boring.

Alexandria and Roy are the heart of the film, though. Catinca Untaru was dis­covered in Romania of all places and shoot­ing of the South African sequences was delayed until she’d learned enough English to play the part. To main­tain the illu­sion for her, Pace spent that entire sec­tion of the shoot pre­tend­ing to be para­lysed from the waist down.

Ah, Lee Pace. When the cast­ing was announced for Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit back in 2010, an act­or friend of mine was only excited about one name com­ing to Wellington to shoot – Lee Pace. There’s some­thing other-worldly about Pace, mak­ing him per­fect for a Tolkien elf, a Twilight vam­pire or Asimov’s galactic Emperor. He’s per­fect here as the depressed stunt­man and the romantic hero and con­trib­utes hugely to how mov­ing this enorm­ous film man­ages to be.

I do recom­mend the disc ver­sion of The Fall because the extras – and the stor­ies told therein – are jaw-dropping. Filmmaking should always aspire to being this ambitious.


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Where to watch The Fall

Worldwide Physical Media: 4K DolbyVision UHD disc from Umbrella Entertainment (collector’s edi­tion or disc-only)

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa and Australia: Digital rental

Australia: Digital rental

Canada, Ireland, India, USA, UK: Streaming on Mubi