Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Looking Glass (2018)

A fresh start, a sour experience

By: JWBM

"Looking Glass" feels like the filmmakers switched places. Like a guitarist did a swap with the drummer, and the drummer is now singing. Music is produced, but something feels unnatural in how it all comes together. This attempts to go for a mystery-thriller vibe, but ends up coming with so little content—and then holding back that content to keep it mysterious—that its story feels thin, haphazard, and without artistic merit at times. It comes with little foreshadowing, character development, or bigger use of its setting. It plods to the point that, when something does happen, it feels like you're getting thrown a stale cookie for watching this long.

The movie in a nutshell: Need a change, so bought a motel. I cleaned and repaired stuff at my new motel. I'm an electrician after all! Guests come and go. Better with my hands than with small talk. I stay out late. The Sheriff pays a visit; he likes coffee. I stay in and watch people through a secret peep hole. Should I? The wife and I are hitting the sheets now. I still watch people. Should I? Let's see what happens. Someone threw a dead animal in the pool. I took care of it myself. I got a visit from the Sheriff; he switches to tea. I stay out late. Drama with the wife. Weird people. No more drama with the wife. The end. If you found that insufferable, consider saving yourself an hour and forty three minutes and thirty two seconds and skip this film.

The more you know the characters, the less you want to know them. Can't say it's solely the fault of the actors, but rather a faulty script, and even faultier directing and editing. The character of Ray—played by Nicolas Cage—has the personality of a no-frills, on-the-cheap Sears catalog lamp. Your choices are gray. Choose wisely. His wife—Robin Tunney, as Maggie—does little of anything exceptional or gravitating, except maybe exits the screen with different variations. There's an attempted backstory that simultaneously brings them closer but also creates a bridge between. However, one can't help but feel that it was cut and pasted in to create some forced tension. It eventually culminates into a heated moment to show off some potential acting skills; at that point it's a little too late. I could understand if this came with some building mood to keep it afloat. I mean, it made its attempts with the oddball locals with an undercurrent of... your guess is as good as mine, but it just ends up coming across as awkward in a let-me-position-my-index-finger-closer-to-the-stop-button kinda way.

Rating: 3.5/10

From Black to Red recommends instead: "Blue Velvet" to show how mystery, weirdness, and atmosphere coalesce into a memorable, intriguing, and exciting experience.

Director: Tim Hunter (The Far Side of Jericho, Control)
Actors: Nicolas Cage, Robin Tunney
Info: IMDB link
Trailer: Youtube link

No comments:

Post a Comment