Truth is, don’t see ‘Charlie’; Wait for ‘The Ring’ on video
You can’t handle ‘The Truth about Charlie’
“The Truth About Charlie” is that Charlie is a complete mystery to
his wife. In truth, Regina, having just returned from the Caribbean,
is going to ask her husband for a divorce, even though they’ve only
been married for three months. But now she doesn’t need to, because
he’s dead. And Regina wonders why in the world the French police
think she did it.
Thandie Newton plays the sometime naive, often stupid Regina
Lambert. The role really only calls for Newton to prance about and be
saved, and she works the part well. Mark Wahlberg plays Joshua
Peters, a man Regina meets in the Caribbean and continues to run into
after she has returned home to Paris. Wahlberg is capable as a man of
mystery but isn’t given a chance to do much more than make scary
faces and wheedle his way into Regina’s life. Although the supporting
cast includes Tim Robbins and Lisa Gay Hamilton, they never get much
chance to do anything of real importance.
Warning: This filmic ride may make you sick! Jonathan Demme uses
circular camera angles and the pictures rarely stops bouncing up and
down. The picture often stops and then speeds forward a minute later.
It’s disorienting. The worst part is that these photography tricks
don’t help the telling of the film, they only hinder it and draw
puzzled looks from moviegoers.
The story is dull and lifeless. It’s hard to care about any of the
characters and the question “Why are we watching this?” keeps popping
up. The conclusion of the mystery is a shot in the dark and the
ending of the movie is predictable. Bizarre characters and events
burst into the movie and the credits. And classical pianist Charles
Aznavour is for some strange reason displayed and allowed to give a
short performance at the end.
“The Truth About Charlie” is not worth knowing.
“The Truth About Charlie” is rated PG-13 for some violence, sexual
content and nudity.
* MELISSA RICHARDSON is a Costa Mesa resident and a junior at UC
Irvine.
Getting ‘The Ring’ less creepy than expected
A remake of “Ringu,” one of Japan’s hits of 1998, “The Ring” was
directed by Gore Verbinski (“Mouse Hunt”) and produced by Walter
Parkes and Laurie MacDonald (“Gladiator,” “Men in Black 2”). The
suspense thriller stars award-winning actress Naomi Watts
(“Mulholland Drive”), Martin Henderson (“Windtalkers”), newcomer
David Dorfman and Emmy winner Brian Cox (“Rob Roy,” “Manhunter”).
Under unexplained circumstances, investigative newspaper reporter
Rachel Keller’s teenage niece Katie has just passed away. A friend
who was with her when she died is in the psychiatric ward of a mental
hospital. Whatever happened to them, they were scared. It seems Katie
was scared to death.
At the funeral, it sounded like just another urban legend being
discussed by Katie’s friends -- a story of a videotape filled with
nightmarish images. After watching it, the viewer gets a phone call
and then dies in exactly seven days.
Skeptical at first, Rachel (Naomi Watts) investigates and finds
that three other teenagers who supposedly watched the tape with her
niece all met with mysterious deaths too; all at exactly the same
time.
Rachel tracks down the video and she watches it, mesmerized by the
disturbing images and sounds. Feeling very uneasy, immediately
afterward she receives a phone call. The voice of a young girl eerily
says, “You have seven days.”
Rattled and convinced something is definitely wrong, she asks her
video expert friend Noah (Martin Henderson) to help track down the
tape’s origin and get to the bottom of its unsettling imagery. Her
skepticism quickly turns to fear however, particularly after her
young son (David Dorfman) mistakenly views the tape as well. She now
knows she has just seven days to unravel the mystery of the tape.
While not among the scariest movies I’ve ever seen, “The Ring” is
definitely a creepy film with good casting, a surprisingly
interesting story and great visuals. Set in the Pacific Northwest, it
provided a perpetually overcast, rainy, cold and gloomy atmosphere
that added to the story’s overall feeling of suspense and dread.
On my personal rating scale of “Pay Full Price,” “Bargain
Matinee,” “Video Rental” or “I’d Rather Watch A REALLY Scary Video
(like a tape of a past ‘Regis & Kathy Lee Show),” I give “The Ring”,
rated PG-13 for violence, sexual content and language, a rating of
somewhere between “Video Rental” and “Bargain Matinee.”
* RICHARD BRUNETTE is a recreation supervisor for the city of
Costa Mesa and a Costa Mesa resident.
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