‘Below’ is sub-par entertainment
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In “Below,” Director David Twohy tries hard to make something from
the screenplay that he wrote with Lucas Sussman and Darren Aronofsky.
Unfortunately the mixture of manufactured dread, cookie-cutter
characters and low-budget set takes away from the successes of the
film.
“Below,” in limited release throughout Los Angeles and New York
markets, stars Bruce Greenwood, Matt Davis, Olivia Williams, Scott
Foley, Zach Galifianakis and Holt McCallany.
Set aboard a World War II submarine, the movie shows a crew
fleeing detection from a mysterious boat above, just as they discover
that something else is hunting them. Is it a giant monster, ghosts, a
sworn enemy or their imagination?
The successful component of the film is its somewhat twisted plot,
with perhaps one surprise. However, the gradual story development
that is meant to evoke suspense does not. The scares and surprises
are few and contrived.
What distracted me most about the film was its design. It
portrayed itself as a period piece set in World War II, yet the
decor, the costumes and the mannerisms seemed strangely
anachronistic, pulling me at times away from the setting. I can only
attribute this to the budget.
The characters that inhabit the submarine are also too convenient
to the story. Efforts to pay homage to other works of suspense
backfire by forcing a comparison by which this film loses.
The ensemble cast does an adequate job with their roles, but the
writing is their enemy. The theme of the film is “accepting
responsibility.” The responsibility for this lame duck lies solely
with its director.
At almost 2 1/2 hours, the film is also too long. My wife nailed
it on the head when she said to me as the credits rolled, “The story
could have been better summed up in a 60-minute episode of ‘The
X-Files.’”
* RAY BUFFER, 33, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
“Knockaround Guys” won’t knock your
Films are often made that are thought to have so little chance for
commercial success they aren’t worth the investment of a decent
marketing campaign. Such movies sit forgotten on a shelf in the
distributor’s office for years, never to be released, or suffer the
most ignoble cinematic fate of all, straight to video.
Sometimes, in a stroke of luck, these forgotten reels are brought
back to life when one of the film’s minor players becomes a big star.
This explains why New Line held on to “Knockaround Guys” for nearly
two years until one member of its ensemble cast became a major
Hollywood player -- namely, Vin Diesel.
“Knockaround Guys” is a fairly standard coming-of-age gangster
tale. Matty (Barry Pepper), the son of prominent gangster Benny
“Chains” Demaret (Dennis Hopper), has tried every legitimate avenue
to become a sports agent. However, his association with his father
convinces potential employers that he simply represents the prelude
to an attempted underworld takeover.
Matty resigns himself to the inevitable and decides to become
involved in his father’s business. Unfortunately, Benny Chains and
his right-hand man, Teddy (John Malkovich), think Matty and his other
gangster wannabes are too soft for the job.
After begging for a shot, Matty is finally allowed to arrange a
simple pickup of some cash for his father. Unfortunately, he chooses
his loser friend Johnny Marbles (Seth Green) to be the bagman.
There are a few interesting characters in “Knockaround Guys.”
Diesel’s Taylor Reese is a half-Jewish street fighter who is truly a
fish out of water, not even fully accepted by the Italian gangsters
with whom he associates. Diesel is an imposing physical presence and
dominates nearly every scene he is in. The always intriguing Tom
Noonan plays the sheriff as unscrupulous but tough and intelligent.
Malkovich, who can be excellent, overdoes the creepy aspect of his
persona as Teddy. Hopper is totally wasted as the one-dimensional
Benny Chains. It’s an astounding case of bad casting -- neither of
them is the least bit believable as New York Italian gangsters.
“Knockaround Guys” is a mediocre film in any context, but given
the many excellent films and even TV shows in this genre, it is
especially weak. My advice is to save yourself the price of
admission, stay home and watch “The Sopranos.”
* VAN NOVACK, 48, is the director of institutional research at
Cal State Long Beach.
“White Oleander” faint shadow of novel
Well, I hate to agree with Oprah, but go buy the book. The screen
adaptation of Janet Fitch’s “White Oleander” just doesn’t do the book
any justice. The vivid picture created by Fitch’s magnetic language
loses its grip the moment it shoots through the projector.
The relatively unknown Alison Lohman does her best to keep the
movie together as Astrid, the ringleader of this film’s downtrodden
women. The movie tries to tell the vivid story of a lost young woman
trying to find herself as she bounces through foster homes after her
mother Ingrid is imprisoned for poisoning and killing an old
boyfriend. The movie, however, fails to deliver Fitch’s magic.
The acting was not bad per se, but the book’s vivid language is
diluted by narration and strained adaptation. Lohman and the rest of
the cast do an admirable job with what they were given, but I left
the theater with the same feeling you get when you only eat half of
your dinner.
There could not have been a better choice to portray a
not-yet-middle-aged stunning blonde than the classic beauty Michelle
Pfeiffer. While I didn’t believe Pfeiffer could convince the audience
that she was a monster as well as a beauty, she manages to perfectly
walk the tightrope between repentant mother and deranged hippie.
Robin Wright Penn and Renee Zellweger give admirable performances
as foster mothers to Astrid. Zellweger impressed me as Claire, the
warm and wealthy Beverly Hills socialite who provides Astrid her only
glimpse into motherly love.
Unless you don’t have more than two hours free in your life, head
for the bookstore and curl up at home with the real thing.
* ANGELA LEE, 31, is an avid moviegoer who recently received her
master’s degrees at UC Irvine.
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