Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Egoyan's Truth lost in the layers: Bacon, Firth shine despite mess

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Egoyan's Truth lost in the layers: Bacon, Firth shine despite mess

    The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
    October 7, 2005 Friday
    Final Edition

    Egoyan's Truth lost in the layers: Bacon, Firth shine despite
    narrative mess

    by Jay Stone, CanWest News Service


    Where The Truth Lies
    Starring: Kevin Bacon, Colin Firth.
    Directed and written by Atom Egoyan
    Rating 2 1/2 out of five

    - - -

    Director Atom Egoyan makes movies that are very much about the
    moviemaking process: not cameras and film stock, but how a filmmaker
    sees a story, how he plucks one narrative out of the multitudes that
    surround any event.

    At his best, in such films as Exotica and The Sweet Hereafter,
    Egoyan's elusiveness helps strengthen the story by giving us several
    versions of it, allowing a mosaic itself to become a character, or a
    mystery.

    Author Russell Banks, who wrote the novel on which The Sweet
    Hereafter was based, was undoubtedly thinking of Egoyan when he said
    turning a book into a movie was like smashing a stained-glass window
    and making a vase out of the shards. The trouble with this approach
    is that it can also put so many layers between us and the story that
    the movie becomes about the layers.

    Ararat, a highly personal Egoyan film about the Armenian holocaust,
    was filmed as a movie-within-a-movie, an approach that cooled the
    passions disastrously: the anger or the mourning that must have
    fuelled the desire to tell the tale in the first place was replaced
    by a meditation on memory, and tragedy seemed like device.

    The same problems arise with Where The Truth Lies, a neo-noir full of
    highly watchable, lurid subject matter -- Hollywood celebrity, a
    murder mystery, lots of sex -- that has become a jumble of confusing
    viewpoints and chronologies.

    This is Egoyan's biggest movie to date ($25 million), featuring the
    biggest stars he has ever worked with in Kevin Bacon and Colin Firth,
    but the combination of accessible material and name talent has
    overwhelmed his vision. You can almost feel Bacon and Firth aching to
    break through the layers of technique.The result is artificial and,
    in the last reel, absurd.

    Bacon and Firth play Lanny and Vince, a famous comedy/singing act of
    the 1950s who enjoy a gaudy, Vegas-style success, access to many
    lovely women and a wise guy's knowledge about the benefits of
    celebrity.

    However, there is a scandal in their lives when a blond turns up dead
    in their hotel bathtub.The act dissolves, Lanny and Vince stop
    talking to one another, and the mystery of the blond is never solved.

    Years later, a reporter named Karen O'Connor (Alison Lohman,
    overwhelmed by the task) sets out to write a tell-all book that will
    unveil the mystery.

    At the end, we finally learn what happened with Lanny and Vince, and
    the upshot turns out to be such an ancient movie joke that you wonder
    if it was meant as a parody of some of the routines the boys used in
    their heyday.

    Egoyan tells this story from several points of view and in different
    timeframes, a commentary on the unreliability of the narrator,
    perhaps, but a son-of-a-gun for the viewer trying to keep things
    straight or, more importantly, believable.

    Within a glittery production design, much of Where The Truth Lies
    seems stagy and fake, and you suspect that not all is a purposeful
    metaphor for the mists of the past.

    The sex scenes, including the famous menage-a-trois among Lanny,
    Vince and a hotel chambermaid (Rachel Blanchard) -- the scene that
    earned Egoyan the harmful NC-17 rating in the United States -- are
    oddly unerotic.

    The shock of seeing stars the magnitude of Bacon and Firth engaging
    in a naked frolic is only part of the reason. There's also a cool,
    distancing effect in Egoyan's direction that makes the episodes seem
    almost laughable.

    Within this fractured mystery are several enjoyable episodes,
    including a scene in which Karen meets Lanny and his butler (David
    Hayman) on a 1970s airplane whose first-class section is as
    wonderfully retro as an arborite kitchenette, and scenes from the
    telethon in which Bacon and Firth persuade us that, all expectations
    to the contrary, they could have been a successful act.

    Bacon is especially good as the hip, womanizing Lanny, who is smarter
    than he seems and Firth has a light touch that darkens later as the
    reporter edges closer to the truth.

    By then, though, Where The Truth Lies has collapsed into a pile of
    good intentions and narrative obsessions. This was to be Egoyan's
    breakthrough into the mainstream, but it is too complex, too thought
    out and neither the truth nor the lies seems to have any reality.

    GRAPHIC:
    Colour Photo: Courtesy, Alliance Atlantis; Kevin Bacon, left, Rachel
    Blanchard and Colin Firth in Canadian director Atom Egoyan's Where
    the Truth Lies.
Working...
X