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FILM REVIEWS
"A Perfect Murder" By Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times June 5, 1998 |
A PERFECT MURDER *** (R)
Michael Douglas is about as good as anyone can be at playing greedy, cold-hearted SOBs.
He's also good at playing nice guys and victims--he's a versatile pro--but when he goes
into his Gordon Gekko mode there's an extra charge on the screen, because we know
everything his character says and does will be deceitful and self-interested.
Consider an early scene in Andrew Davis' ``A Perfect Murder.'' Douglas plays Steven
Taylor, a wealthy currency trader. Gwyneth Paltrow plays Emily, his wife. She comes home
to their designer apartment to find him dressed for a museum opening. They kiss. She says
how nice he looks: ``I'll hurry and get dressed so I can catch up.'' Throughout this
entire scene, dislike hangs in the air. There's nothing overt. It's simply a way Douglas
has of pronouncing his words, as if he wants to say all the proper things even though he
doesn't mean them.
The Paltrow character is an heiress who is having an affair with an artist named David
Shaw (Viggo Mortensen). We learn that in the first scene. ``A Perfect Murder'' doesn't
fool around with a misleading opening charade to deceive us. This is not a happy marriage
and the movie never pretends otherwise, and when the husband confronts the artist in his
studio, there is a kind of blunt savagery to the way he cuts to the bottom line. (``You
steal the crown jewel of a man's life, and all you can come up with is some [wimpy]
Hallmark sentiment?'')
A murder is arranged in the movie, but for once the TV ads leave you with a certain doubt
about who is doing what and with which and to whom, so I won't reveal the secret. I will
say that Paltrow does a convincing job of playing a chic wife who considers love to be a
choice more than a destiny. Viggo Mortensen undergoes an interesting transformation in his
key scene with Douglas; we believe him when he's a nice guy, and we believe him even more
when he's not; he doesn't do a big style shift, he simply turns off his people-pleasing
face.
The screenplay, by Patrick Smith Kelly, is based on the play ``Dial M for Murder'' and the
Hitchcock film of the same title. It has little in common with its predecessors. It's
about negotiation more than deception, money more than love. Everybody's motives are
pretty much clear from the beginning, and when the body is found on the kitchen floor the
only mystery is how long it will take the survivor to find the key to the scheme.
Surprisingly, the movie got some negative early reviews. I think it works like a nasty
little machine to keep us involved and disturbed; my attention never strayed, and one of
the elements I liked was the way Paltrow's character isn't sentimentalized. She says she's
in love with the artist, yes, but she gets over it in a hurry; it takes her about one line
of dialogue. And there is a moment when it appears that husband and wife will put adultery
and violence behind them, and continue their pragmatic liaison as a rich guy and his
multi-lingual trophy wife. Who wouldn't want to keep living in that great apartment?
But there's another problem: Steven is having a portfolio meltdown (his one of his
advisers tells him, ``Think Chernobyl''). Steven is driven not only by jealousy but by
need and greed. Emily has a $100 million trust fund that would help Steven cover those
margins (although the markets move a lot faster than probate, and the inheritance is
unlikely to arrive in time to do much good).
The movie is a skilled example of what I call the Fatal Basic genre. Like ``Fatal
Attraction,'' ``Basic Instinct'' and all of their lesser imitators, it's about sex between
bad people who live in good houses. Nobody is better at Fatal Basic than Michael Douglas,
who doesn't need to read GQ because he instinctively knows what clothes to wear and which
cigars to smoke.
My only real disappointment with the movie comes at the end, when various differences are
resolved with gunshots. This is such a tired story solution. I realize that the Hollywood
bylaws require all action movies to end in shoot-outs, but is a gun really necessary in a
Fatal Basic movie? I'd prefer the chessmaster approach to the problem, in which a single
line of logical dialogue seals a character's fate, and then we get a big closeup of him
realizing he's screwed. Gunshots release tension, but they don't provide audience
pleasure, because the victim is dead and therefore cannot feel as bad as he deserves to.
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