D: Roland Joffé; with Patricia Arquette, Dermot Mulroney, Ellen DeGeneres,
Mary-Louise Parker, Don Johnson, Ray McKinnon, Alex Rocco, Andre Gregory. (R,
104 min.)
From a story by Austin Heart of Film Festival winner Ron Peer (the final film
is credited to Peer, Joel Cohen, and Alec Sokolow) comes this sporadically ingenious
puzzle box of a film, a deeply cynical, blacker-than-black murder mystery that struggles
valiantly to stay one step ahead of the viewer and succeeds more often than not.
Drawing its tone (if not its story) from sources as varied as Jim Thompson novels
and classic film noir conventions to modern-day whodunits, Joffé (The Killing
Fields, The Mission) constructs an intricate house of cards with his scheming characters
and then ... blows. Mulroney plays Jake Dunmore, an ad executive and spinmeister
who's currently lodged in a liquor bottle. His job at a prestigious agency is increasingly
threatened by his bizarre, out-of-control rants and behavior, and he's beginning
to suspect that his wife, Sandra (Arquette), is having an affair behind his back.
She is, of course, and it's with Jake's older brother Ben, who bides his time between
covering for his brother at the agency and playing Bach (and schtupping Sandra) at
the local church. Also in this tremulous mix is Peggy (Parker), a bubbly, scatterbrained
junior staff member who's apparently developing the hots for Ben. Nothing is what
it at first seems, though, and when Ben plunges to his death one night, courtesy
of Jake and Sandra, who are intent on securing older brother's $4 million life insurance
policy, a ravenous appetite for both murder and instant wealth is cracked open, leaving
the surviving players to duke it out amongst themselves to see who will be the last
man (or woman) breathing. Also on board is DeGeneres as a flip, supercilious detective
who may or may not know more than she's letting on. DeGeneres has come into her own
as a comic actress (as opposed to simply a comic), and her obvious, unaffected screen
presence -- half bemused cynic, half bewildered onlooker -- fuels much of Goodbye
Lover. In a picture filled with comic turns, some quite good, some better than good,
DeGeneres is at her peak, tweaking the action around her with various dark jibes
and generally having a ball with the material. Patricia Arquette carries the movie
-- she's in a good 65% of the scenes -- and it ought to be noted that she does a
bang-up job. Granted, Joffé has placed his characters in somewhat of a slightly
left-of-center milieu (there's a definite surrealist touch going on here, and you
know this isn't the real world), but she pulls off the convoluted role of scheming,
scamming wife-mistress far better than expected, crinkled grin and all. This marks
something of a return to form for Joffé, as well. After (apparently) losing
his way with the overeager City of Joy and The Scarlet Letter, he's now forsworn
the righteous and the adapted in favor of more earthy pleasures, and while not yet
back up to the level of his early genius, he's obviously making a return in that
direction. Good for him, and good for us.
3.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
Goodbye Lover 
Goodbye Lover 
Goodbye Lover 
Capsule Reviews
Goodbye Lover 
Other Films by Roland Joffe
The Scarlet Letter 
Film Vault Suggested Links
A Simple Plan 
Frogs for Snakes 
Some Like it Hot 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Roland Joffe at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|