Although Neil LaBute's audacious debut film, In the Company of Men, is a tough act
to follow, the writer-director's sophomore effort, Your Friends & Neighbors,
finds LaBute's audacity hardy and intact, even if it now seems a little more predictable
and mannered. LaBute's subject matter still finds its punch from the banal cruelty
of which human relationships are capable. Only now, in this follow-up film, LaBute
has focused his lens on the bedroom instead of the boardroom. His constellation of
characters here has doubled, from three to six, and now includes women among society's
perpetrators of contemptuous immorality. LaBute's narrative structure and visual
strategies are rigorously crafted, bespeaking an almost mathematical calculation
that, in compellingly contradictory ways, both enhances the dramatic experience while
undermining its very authenticity. What's never in doubt, however, is the authenticity
of the dialogue: LaBute writes conversations as though eavesdropping were his full-time
occupation. The language is cutting, foul-mouthed, and raw; words are the ammunition
of articulate savages. In this, his language is given an able assist from a uniformly
brilliant crop of actors. Yet the people he depicts are our "friends and neighbors,"
our recognizable and ordinary selves rather than the distanced corporate villains
of In the Company of Men who make a conscious pact to "go out and hurt someone."
This time out, LaBute's characters really hurt the ones they love, or the ones they
bed -- occasionally one and the same. The story is set in some unnamed urban center
and, likewise, all six characters remain nameless throughout the course of the film,
although the credits list their names as a curious sing-song mix-and-match of sameness:
Mary, Terri, Cheri, Barry, Cary, and Jerry. Jerry (Stiller) is an over-analytical
drama professor with a penchant for Restoration comedy and a physical appearance
that I think more than a little resembles that of LaBute. Jerry's domestic partner
Terri (Keener, the indie film actress par excellence) is a cold, practical sort who
just wishes Jerry would shut up while they are making love. Jerry prompts the movie's
roundelay when he propositions the wife of his best friend Barry (Eckhart, who poured
on the flab for this role as the cuckolded husband following his role as In the Company
of Men's well-toned predator). Sex between Jerry and his wife Mary (Brenneman) has
become unsatisfying; Jerry readily admits to the guys that the best sex he ever had
was with himself. To even the score with Jerry, Terri takes Cheri (Kinski) as a lover,
but the film's showiest role belongs to Patric's Cary, a cynically amoral cad who
admits to the vilest of behaviors and indeed, is seen prior to the film's opening
credits practicing sexual sincerity into a tape recorder while masturbating. Your
Friends & Neighbors is nothing if not neatly structured: the compositions, the
repetitive set-pieces, the camera movements, and character balance. And though it's
a pleasure to watch, the payoff is mostly cosmetic. Perhaps because In the Company
of Men was such a total triumph of form, means, and content, everything else LaBute
does will seem diminished by comparison. He has certainly carved out an identity
for himself as our smartest scenarist of the dark side of human nature. Whether many
of us will want to look is another question entirely.
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Interviews
Your Friends and Neighbors 
Your Friends and Neighbors 
Full Length Reviews
Your Friends and Neighbors 
Your Friends and Neighbors 
Your Friends and Neighbors 
Your Friends and Neighbors 
Your Friends and Neighbors 
Capsule Reviews
Your Friends and Neighbors 
Other Films by Neil LaBute
In the Company of Men 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Crazy in Alabama 
Little Shots Of Happiness 
Luminarias 
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