Review Date:
Director: Fernando Meirelles
Writer: Jeffrey Caine
Producers: Simon Channing-Williams
Actors:
Ralph Fiennes as Justin Rachel Weisz as Tessa Danny Huston as Sandy |
Now before you think that I completely hated this film, understand that I generally love political thrillers, even those that depend more on their cerebral elements, rather than any actual thrills, but this film just “spoke” too damn much, seemed to be talking about the same thing over and over again (some of the flashbacks seemed redundant as well), and ultimately really didn’t inform me all that much, and certainly didn’t entertain. Fiennes is fine in his role as the grieving-soon-to-be-pissed husband, and Rachel Weisz was decent as the wife, but neither really brought any extra potency to their written-to-be-distant parts either. Sure, once things dragged down nearing the film’s conclusion, I appreciated the connection between the two characters, but that whole thing is slapped in the face when another character literally gets up and reads a notice to a group of people in his audience (read: you and me as well), explaining the whole shebang to everyone. Kinda like a killer at the end of a horror movie. Lame-o. But the film is pretty to look at, the directing keeps things moving pretty well – despite not much happening most of the time – and unlike most films these days, this one actually has something to say. I only wish they had wrapped it in less padding (way too many shots of kids running around the streets), injected it with a handful of thrilling or action sequences (just to wake us up, if anything) and ultimately, provided the audience with something a little less clichéd and a lot more entertaining and/or informative. Oh, and if you’re looking for a straight-forward “thriller”, stay faaaar away from this one, because it truly plays more like a political drama, than a thriller. In fact, I don’t remember being thrilled even once.
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