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bros

Joined May 2000
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bros's rating
Les âmes perdues

Les âmes perdues

4.8
  • Sep 13, 2001
  • Take a second look

    The majority of the reviewers of this film were looking for a movie that isn't there at the expenses of seeing the movie that is. Lost Souls is a tightly wound question balanced on the edge of a knife: Is Maya a psycho killer or the savior of mankind? Given the fact that most psycho killers believe they are saviors of mankind, I opt for the psycho killer interpretation. The movie, which is a continuous balancing of the question, never letting up on clues that raise the question further, opts to let us decide. It allows Maya to walk away from the car after murdering the person she had convinced was the devil. At the fade out, one wonders how she had managed to get away with murdering her parents and how many more she will murder before she is finally stopped.

    Ryder, whose eyes have always been a vehicle for her acting, uses them chillingly in the scene in which she murders Father Lareaux. Studying Ryder's evolving facial expressions as Maya finds out that the Father won't support her delusions, takes action, and then gloats at the outcome will convince anyone she's crazy.

    An incredible performance. Or the way she handles the scene in which Kelson, her intended victim, casts back to his past to test if he really could be the devil. Kaminski bolsters it with the imagery of a deer caught in the headlights of an oncoming car unknowingly escaping, for the moment.

    Adding up the body count just bolsters the psycho killer interpretation. By her own hand, she kills: the murderer George Viznik, brain dead; Kelson's girlfriend, Claire Van Owen; Father Lareaux and Kelson himself. Murders at her instigation: the investigator, John Townsend; Kelson's uncle/father; and Kelson's brother.

    Take a second look. Watch Maya's eyes. Ask yourself at every turn, is this about the devil, or is this about the here and now, a psycho killer walking invisibly among us.
    Heaven

    Heaven

    6.5
  • Jun 5, 2001
  • Heaven is a violent film, a clever film and an original film.

    This film, shown at both the Montreal and Toronto film festivals, is

    so original that its merits passed over the heads of the busy

    reviewers.

    Scott Reynolds uses a very clever device to allow the viewer to

    suspend disbelief that one of the characters could accurately

    foretell the future. Heaven, the seer, is a transvestite stripper in a

    regular strip club. The viewer focuses on this improbability and

    lets the improbability that someone can foresee the future slip into

    the film's reality.

    Having created a believable character that can and does foretell

    the future, Reynolds is then faced with another problem. How to

    keep the viewer from knowing the future. He accomplishes this

    with a series of carefully staged flashbacks (and flash forwards)

    that, although accurate, are out of sequence and therefore lead the

    viewer to believe in a series of events that is not accurate.

    I have never seen a more cleverly thought up, worked out and

    executed script.

    With his plan in place, Reynolds creates one of the most

    improbable plots imaginable, but because we have moved beyond

    suspending disbelief and become believers, one that seems very

    probable.

    Richard Schiff superbly portrays the character of the strip club

    owner, Stanner. Stanner has hired Heaven and brought him/her

    under his wing because he has turned Heaven's ability to foretell

    the future into profits. Stanner, however, is also involved with

    Robert Marling, played by Martin Donovan (II). I would continue to

    say superbly, but the fact is, the acting in the film is first rate all

    around.

    Marling is going through a bitter divorce with the stunning Joanna

    Going as Jennifer Marling. Jennifer is seeing the sleazy

    psychiatrist Dr. Melrose played by Patrick Malahide.

    And in the pivotal coincidence, Heaven is also seeing the

    unbelievably evil (but nonetheless believable) Dr. Melrose

    because Heaven's visions of the future trouble him/her deeply (the

    visions, not the sexual ambiguity).

    Marling is a down and out gambling addict, an architect who is

    designing a new club Stanner has commissioned with the

    millions he has earned from following Heaven's visions of the

    future. Marling is forever losing money to Stanner in poker games.

    Heaven sets the plot in motion by foreseeing Marling saving him

    from being viciously murdered by two sadistic thugs. Heaven sets

    out to reward Marling by using his/her foretelling abilities to feed

    Marling information on how the cards will fall in his poker hands

    with Stanner.

    Evil Dr. Melrose discovers this in his sessions with Heaven. He

    seduces Jennifer. Advising her on her divorce settlement, the bad

    doctor tells Jennifer to hold out for the fortune her husband is

    about to come into as a result of Heaven's foretelling, intending to

    take the fortune for himself.

    Stanner has plenty of cash but can't resist playing the angles,

    deciding to burn down his club to make way for the new one

    designed by Marling. He hires two homicidal maniacs to do the

    task for him, the same two sadists Heaven foresees murdering

    him, and it is these two who initiate the mass slaughter that

    makes the film so violent.

    This film is a sleeper. It will be discovered, its clever features

    copied and it will become a classic. Scott Reynolds does not have

    a large body of work, but any director or writer would be proud to

    have this film to their credit.
    Strapless

    Strapless

    5.7
  • Jan 16, 2001
  • Satisfying a woman's romantic ideal

    If a director wanted to make a movie using the popular conception that what men want is sex, all that would be needed would be an attractive actress and a little bit of a story line. But what if the director wants to turn the tables and make a movie out of the popular conception that what women want is romance? David Hare did and produced the gem Strapless. An ordinary women on vacation meets a handsome, cultivated man who turns out to be attentive, generous and is well versed in the fine art of the pursuit. He is wealthy, has titled friends, is loving, devoted and kind and is surrounded by an aura of mystery with just a hint of danger. In short, the average women realizes the answer to any woman's yearnings, the perfect romantic partner. After meticulously creating the fantasy, Hare shows us the outcome. Blair Brown projects a sense of wonderment that this could be happening to her while Bridget Fonda, early in her career, deftly provides the dose of reality needed to support the romanticism. Bruno Ganz is, in the words of his on-screen foster mother, that rare man that loves women. Carefully scripted and well acted throughout, Strapless is a keeper.
    See all reviews

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