Why I love Carl Franklin’s One False Move | Little White Lies

In Praise Of

Why I love Carl Franklin’s One False Move

24 Feb 2023

A man with short dark hair wearing a chequered shirt, looks surprised and is holding a gun.
A man with short dark hair wearing a chequered shirt, looks surprised and is holding a gun.
Franklin’s 1992 thriller about a small-town cop fac­ing off against a mur­der­ous trio cuts to the heart of police cor­rup­tion and racial otherness.

Anger is not some­thing that can be faked in cin­e­ma. Few films har­ness anger into an ener­gy; few­er are legit­i­mate reck­on­ings. Carl Franklin’s 1992 thriller, One False Move, is a reck­on­ing of such pow­er and intel­li­gence that it’s a crime that it remains so under-appreciated.

The film fol­lows small-town Arkansas Cop, Dale Dixon (Bill Pax­ton), who finds him­self fac­ing off against a trio of crim­i­nals: Fan­ta­sia (Cyn­da Williams), Ray (Bil­ly Bob Thorn­ton) and Plu­to (Michael Beach) who arrive in Star City after com­mit­ting a string of mur­ders in LA. Dale decides it’s the per­fect oppor­tu­ni­ty to prove his met­tle, as a cop and as a man.

Dale seems a good natured, bum­bling opti­mist, and in a less­er work, he might be the hero­ic cliché of the last good guy in a sea of cor­rup­tion. But Franklin – direct­ing a script by Bil­ly Bob Thorn­ton and Tom Epper­son – is well aware of the dan­gers of aggran­diz­ing the police. There had been enough of that in the decades previous.

The 1980s’ slate of Amer­i­can action films were care­ful to make police forces look not only effec­tive, but sexy. The likes of Lethal Weapon and Bev­er­ly Hills Cop, while unde­ni­ably well-craft­ed, reha­bil­i­tat­ed the image of law enforce­ment not by san­i­tiz­ing them, but by embrac­ing a mode of over the top vio­lence and wink­ing humour that would present cops as mav­er­icks who did what need­ed to be done.

This Rea­gan era excess is per­haps pre­sent­ed most blunt­ly in 1986’s Cobra, a film about a one-man army in the shape of a cop. The tagline sum­marised the decade’s the­sis: Crime is a dis­ease. Meet the cure”. One False Move offered a rebut­tal to the unchecked pro­lif­er­a­tion of these movies, shar­ing more in com­mon with The Big Heat than Red Heat.

While the film noirs that influ­enced One False Move were will­ing to dive into a seedy under­bel­ly, even they had lim­its, in large part thanks to the Hays Code. Films like Touch of Evil sug­gest­ed that police cor­rup­tion was an excep­tion that proved the rule: that cops were, sup­pos­ed­ly, decent peo­ple by their nature. In con­trast, One False Move was released the year of the L.A riots – it was clear­er than ever that the entire jus­tice sys­tem was broken.

After the mur­ders that open the film, terms are used by the detec­tives that dehu­man­ise the sus­pects. He’s a black guy with glass­es”, one says about Plu­to, while casu­al­ly throw­ing in she’s good look­ing”, when look­ing at a pho­to of Fan­ta­sia, who is mixed race. How long will it be before any black guy with glass­es” will look sus­pi­cious to them, and any mixed race woman will excite them?

One cop tells the press the crime is as vio­lent as we’ve ever seen” but the tac­tics of the police bear a sub­tler, insid­i­ous vio­lence. Fear mon­ger­ing forms a media sto­ry, and goes on to shape pub­lic opin­ion. It all trick­les down from above like blood through floor­board cracks, briefly sati­at­ing the blood­lust below.

Dale’s juris­dic­tion is small­er, but his hunger for pow­er is the same. I’ve been think­ing about mov­ing out to L.A and join­ing up”, he tells a detec­tive. He watch­es a lot of TV”, Dale’s wife lat­er men­tions. Per­haps he saw the press con­fer­ence about the crimes. Per­haps it remind­ed him of a Sylvester Stal­lone film.

When Dale uses racial slurs, the detec­tives look at each oth­er wry­ly. They wear suits; Dale wears jeans and a jack­et. He dri­ves a truck; they dri­ve town cars. The eager­ness to dis­miss racism as an issue con­fined to the work­ing class is keen­ly recog­nised, and the film is adept at explor­ing prej­u­dice on all eco­nom­ic lev­els. Through each stra­ta, the beast feeds itself, an unstop­pable ouroboros. We find out the detec­tives use Dale and his local knowl­edge to their ben­e­fit, with­out ever admit­ting that they need him. Their beliefs are the same as his: they’ve just had enough train­ing to know how to dis­guise them. Dale hasn’t, and they’d nev­er accept a work­ing class guy like him into their midst.

Mean­while, Fan­ta­sia is treat­ed with out­right cru­el­ty by Ray, who fetishis­es and bru­talis­es her in equal mea­sure. Franklin is care­ful to explore her char­ac­ter beyond being a ves­sel for vio­lence – she is com­plex, unpre­dictable, cagey. He trains his cam­era on her with fas­ci­na­tion rather than with a leer­ing eye; we won­der who she was before she met Ray.

Two people, a woman with dark hair and a man with a beard, sitting at a table with drinks in a dimly lit room.

Just as Fan­ta­sia is a vic­tim of Ray’s, each of their vic­tims is black. These aren’t crimes of neces­si­ty; they are done with glee­ful sadism. The film blazes with a des­per­a­tion for a cease­fire, but nev­er does the pace slow for moral­is­ing. Just as big­otry is a symp­tom of a soci­ety built on com­pe­ti­tion and cap­i­tal­ism, so too are the film’s ideas by-prod­ucts of its plot­ting. They are woven so care­ful­ly into the sto­ry that it’s only as the threads tight­en that they begin to reveal themselves.

As the trio edge clos­er to a show­down with Dale, the film begins to resem­ble a Neo-West­ern. The quin­tes­sen­tial anx­i­eties of the genre, most notably the con­cerns about a nation­al iden­ti­ty, are all present, mined from the sub­con­scious of a rel­a­tive­ly new coun­try just as coal was mined from its earth. Dale resem­bles Gary Coop­er in High Noon, a lone sher­iff framed against gor­geous land­scapes at sun­rise. And like High Noon, One False Move aches with futility.

After Fan­ta­sia splits from Ray and Plu­to, Dale finds her hid­ing out in a farm­house. It turns out they have a his­to­ry togeth­er – he slept with her when she was a teenag­er, and is her son’s father. She asks if he’ll try some of the birth­day cake she bought for their baby; he fid­gets and sneers Don’t call him that”. His shame and denial ties into the Western’s fear of moral cor­rup­tion, and in the scenes between the two, a twist on melo­dra­ma emerges. The domes­tic­i­ty of the genre is reflect­ed in a house that is turned into a fort. Out­side there will be gun­fire, while inside there are secrets which will destroy Dale and Fantasia’s sens­es of self.

My dad­dy was white”, Fan­ta­sia says. You fig­ured since I look kin­da white you can fuck me. And because I was kin­da black, you think you can dump me”. Dale’s stands in qui­et shame.. Paxton’s charis­ma car­ries a wound­ed qual­i­ty, and a poten­tial for it to be weaponised. His inner ten­sion sug­gests a desire to make things right, but his shame paral­y­ses him. He abused his pow­er, and now his fear of the oth­er’ is per­ma­nent­ly tied to his existence.

Even so, Dale is using Fantasia’s body again, for bait rather than sex this time. She speaks with soft­ness as she pleads for acknowl­edge­ment, and the femme fatale trope is flipped; she isn’t a viper who has ruined his life – she is a kid who wants her pain to be acknowl­edged. Black and mixed race peo­ple do not get to refuse the way things are; there is no lux­u­ry of denial.

My grand­fa­ther was ashamed of his own race. So beat­en down by the racism he suf­fered, he would bleach his skin to try and make it lighter and prayed that his chil­dren would turn out lighter than he was. My grand­moth­er was a Ger­man Jew who did every­thing she could to con­ceal her iden­ti­ty, so scared that she’d be sin­gled out. Many find it hard to believe that any per­son could be brought to that point, but it was the result of a soci­ety that refused to accept itself.

Noth­ing can undo the pain they went through, not even an acknowl­edge­ment of the fact, so we look to art for solace. In a strange way, I find One False Move to be cathar­tic. The film talks about the things we’re not sup­posed to talk about, in a genre that has his­tor­i­cal­ly denied the things on which it is built; the fetishis­ing of exploita­tion and violence.

I can see myself in Dale and Fantasia’s child, and the ten­der­ness that the film dis­plays towards him is dev­as­tat­ing. To acknowl­edge and feel proud of who you are , when you know that your ances­tors couldn’t, is deeply con­flict­ing – to see that con­flict play out on screen is trans­for­ma­tive. One False Move is an inter­ro­ga­tion of shame and race, whilst also func­tion­ing as an exor­cism of a cen­tu­ry of vio­lent cin­e­ma. As a result, it feels like the last movie on earth, the end of a cin­e­mat­ic era.

I keep return­ing to a moment towards the end of the film, in which a wound­ed Dale final­ly sits beside his young son. It is a rare moment of ten­der­ness, in which a deeply flawed per­son final­ly reck­ons with him­self. What do you do with your keys?” the kid asks, seem­ing­ly per­plexed by this stranger lying blood­ied in the dust. I lock things up”, he tells him.

This line says it all. Here is a man who is a prod­uct of a cul­ture that locks things away when they’re incon­ve­nient, a man that clings to the bina­ry of good and bad, black and white, cop and rob­ber. All that is left of it now is the kid sit­ting next to him. He asks him to come clos­er so he can get a good look at him. In his face per­haps he sees the truth: it’s time for the things we lock away to come out.

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