Robin Tunney in Niagra, Niagra
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Call it "grunge cinema," "scuzz cinema," "Gun Crazy cinema," whatever you like: Two
lonely, white-trash adolescents fall in love, shoot guns, commit crimes, and go on
the lam, everything ultimately ending in tragedy. The territory charted in Niagara,
Niagara is a familiar one, except that one of the characters has Tourette's syndrome.
While the affliction makes the relationship between Seth and Marcie all the more
doomed -- you know from the start that her violent, unpredictable outbursts will be
their undoing -- it's more gimmicky than psychologically meaningful, although Tunney
does well in conveying her character's matter-of-fact acceptance of her illness.
(Indeed, Tunney's performance won the best actress award at last year's Venice Film
Festival.) Meeting by chance while shoplifting, the couple hit the road in a beat-up
station wagon, with frequent stops at liquor stores and pharmacies, as they attempt
to pass off forged prescriptions for medicine that will control Marcie's increasingly
erratic behavior. (A prolonged detour at a dilapidated shack owned by the grizzly,
half-out-of-his-mind Parks upsets the movie's road-trip rhythm.) The love story in
Niagara, Niagara is premised on a notion that Seth and Marcie belong together because
they're both freaks in a way, unable to find anyone else. Whether that's a romantic
sentiment or a cynical observation, of course, depends on your perspective. Regardless,
you never feel the urgency of this union of lost souls; their meeting is more happenstance
than fateful. With some irony, the film's title (one of the traits of Tourette's
syndrome is the repetition of words) refers to the traditional American destination
of young lovers, a spectacular place for honeymooners with their whole lives ahead
of them. Of course, the Falls mark a coda for the pair here, rather than a beginning.
In the end, the whole thing seems pointless because the excursion on which the movie
seeks to take you is an unfulfilling one, a journey that hits a dead end even before
it starts.
1.0 stars
--Steve Davis
Full Length Reviews
Niagara, Niagara 
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