‘Master’ is masterpiece; ‘Gothika’ fails
JOHN DEPKO
Crowe is commanding
in Oscar-worthy flick
Director Peter Weir has made many noteworthy movies including
“Dead Poets Society” “Witness” and “The Year of Living Dangerously.”
In “Master And Commander: The Far Side of the World” he has created a
true seafaring masterpiece that is sure to receive Oscar nominations
on several levels. He brings to life outstanding characters from the
best selling historical novels of Patrick O’Brien that capture the
harsh reality of life on the high seas in an English warship at the
turn of the 19th Century.
Russell Crowe was born to play the swashbuckling hero Capt. Jack
Aubrey. He commands the English ship as it pursues a larger and more
dangerous French Privateer into the South Pacific. He brings power
and depth to a role that requires life and death decisions on a
moment’s notice. His intellectual counterpoint is the ship’s surgeon,
played with verve by Paul Brettany, who presents educated discourse
on the current history, science and moral state of affairs that
conflict with Captain Aubrey’s mission.
For a film with such intelligent dialogue, it never fails to
present first-rate action adventure scenes that catapult the viewer
into the heart of its breathtaking battles. Frigid seas and 50-foot
high waves near the Antarctic Circle provide even more harrowing
threats to the hardy crew. For all its sweeping scope, this film
still provides thoughtful insight into the daily lives of even the
lowest ranking sailors on board the fateful vessel. A modern classic,
“Master and Commander” sets a standard that rivals the best historic
war dramas Hollywood has ever made. It’s the real deal. Don’t miss
it.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
Schlock therapy to be had in gloomy movie
If you want to see a stylishly scary movie, then I suggest you
rent “The Ring.” If you want to see an incoherent but stylish
B-movie, then go right ahead and plunk your $9 down for “Gothika.”
In this mess of a movie, Halle Berry plays Miranda Grey, a
beautiful psychiatrist (is there any other kind?) in an appropriately
gloomy prison hospital where the lights are always flickering. As the
film opens we see her listening to the ravings of the beautiful but
criminally cuckoo patient Chloe (played by Penelope Cruz).
With all these good looking people, it’s rather jolting to see the
portly, middle-aged Charles S. Dutton plant a big wet one on Miranda;
a vague feeling of creepiness ensues -- shades of things to come? We
then learn he is her husband, Doug, and also her boss. Miranda’s
colleague is the twitchy Dr. Peter Graham (Robert Downey, Jr.) who
seems to have a thing for Miranda as well.
On a dark and stormy night, Miranda leaves for home but has an
accident when she swerves to avoid a ghastly young girl in the road.
As it turns out, Miranda now has the power to see dead people. The
shock of it all makes her lose consciousness; she awakens only to
discover she is under Peter’s care as a patient and prisoner in her
own hospital. It seems Doug was brutally hacked to death at their
home, and she is the prime suspect.
Miranda is noticing strange sounds and lighting effects in her
chicly gray prison cell, all nicely calculated to make us jump in our
seats. Who is causing all this? Could it be ... Satan? Or perhaps
just a muddled screenplay and over-the top direction by Mathieu
Kassovitz (you may remember him as Audrey Tatou’s boyfriend in
“Amelie.”)
I like a good mystery, but this story line is so implausible and
the dialogue isn’t even funny enough to be considered camp -- it’s
just plain dull. Example: Miranda to her doctor -- “I’m not deluded,
Pete, I’m obsessed!” All-right then.
The mystery is what possessed Halle Berry to take this role. She
is quite believable as a woman crazed with grief and torment who also
looks good in wet clothing. But she’s been there, done that in a much
better movie that earned her the Oscar (“Monster’s Ball”).
The big finish to the film defies credibility as well. The sudden
disrobing of the bad guy is more disturbing for the sight of his
beached-whale body than for what he is about to do to Miranda. In
this movie it seems that good is skinny, fat is bad.
Dr. Graham shows up for a laughably last-minute rescue of Miranda
-- it seems he was able to solve the entire mystery by checking
things out on the Web (it’s always the last place you look). As
Miranda says, “Logic is highly overrated.”
* SUSANNE PEREZ lives in Costa Mesa and is an executive assistant
for a financial services company.
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