"When Good Films Make Big Errors"
Nothing depresses more than a film with strong potential
that goes south due to a glaring misjudgment. A love story
can't work if the characters' motivations are fogged by script
holes. A thriller only baffles the audience if they cannot
concentrate on the action. Two new films have much to offer,
but sketchy screenwriting in "A Home At The End of the World"
and shoddy camerawork and editing in "The Bourne Supremacy"
prevent me from fully recommending either.
Pulitzer Prize winning author Michael Cunningham ("The Hours") adapted his
own novel "A Home At The End Of The World" for this Michael Mayer production.
Bobby Morrow learned the precariousness of life early when in 1969 the brother
he idolized dies before his eyes. Before graduating from college, he has lost
his entire family. His best friend Jonathan, a misfit coming to grips with
his homosexuality, adopts Bobby into his family.
Years later in 1982, Bobby (Colin Farrell), still a free spirit, returns to
his touchstone Jonathan (Dallas Roberts) in New York. Jonathan's punk rock
Girl Friday Clare (Robin Wright Penn) falls madly for the bohemian Bobby and
instantly comes between the two "brothers." But there's a secret she hasn't
guessed; one from the past that will eventually leave her extraneous.
A complicated love story convolutedly strays because Cunningham's script ignores
vital character motivations. The three players in this love triangle have our
empathy immediately, but the cloudy rationales left me cold.
The cast shapes the roles as best they can. Farrell continues to prove his
status as the most watchable actor. Magnetic eyes and a boyish smile make Bobby
beguiling to all, an inadvertent pied piper. Also in top form, Sissy Spacek
shines as Jonathan's loving mother, who slips away from the suburban shackles
and expands her mind due to Bobby's influence.
Both Roberts and Wright Penn give strong performances as the platonic couple
disrupted by the newcomer, but Wright suffers the most from the script troubles.
The script and performances are the prime assets of "Bourne
Supremacy" if only the cinematography didn't have me grabbing
for the Dramamine.
At the end of "Bourne Identity" Jason Bourne (Matt Damon)
warned the government to leave him. They didn't listen. Framed
for a murder of an agent, Bourne becomes a target of an FBI
agent (Joan Allen), obsessed with tracking Jason down.
Screenwriter Tony Gilroy takes the book's predictable plot
and adds sharp dialogue to create an action thrill ride.
As the calculating Bourne, Damon commands the role, but it's
Joan Allen as the agent consumed by the truth that stole
the show. Twice this year, Allen has played roles that in
others hands would have been forgettable, but both here and
in "The Notebook," Allen has dazzled with piercing portrayals.
As for the villains, they're obvious from the start. They
are director Paul Greengrass ("Bloody Sunday"), cinematographer
Oliver Wood and one or both of the editors Richard Pearson
and Christopher Rouse. The cameraman must have worn one high
heel and one flip-flop while filming every scene, for the
frame never stands still. It even wobbled during quiet moments
where there is not logic reason for the un-steady cam. I
haven't been so woozy since "Blair Withc Project." The choppy
editing also disrupts these scenes. The action scenes, particularly
the "newspaper" fight, have been framed too tightly, lit
too dark and containing two people wearing similar clothes.
It's never clear who's throwing which punch.
"Bourne Supremacy" and "A Home At The End of the World" contain such brilliant
moments that it's regretful that neither had another few months for reshoots.
There's the kernel of great cinema ready to pop.
Grade: "A Home At The End of the World": B-; "Bourne Supremacy": B+ |