 Mystic
River, directed by Clint Eastwood,
is a murder mystery, based on the novel by Dennis
Lehane, which takes
place in working class East Buckingham close to the
river that runs near Boston's Logan Airport. When
the film begins, three eleven-year-olds are playing
street hockey (without the ice). A freshly cemented
sidewalk block beckons them to inscribe their names
for posterity. Jimmy Markum, the instigator, begins,
followed by Sean Devine, but before David Boyle can
spell out more than two letters of his name, a car
door opens. A man posing as a police officer chastises
the boys for defacing public property and then orders
David into the car so that he can be taken home so
that his mother will know of his misconduct. However,
David is instead abducted, molested sexually for
several days; after he escapes, he returns home psychologically
damaged. Next, the scene shifts to a time twenty-five
years later. Sean (played by Kevin Bacon) is a Massachusetts
State Police officer whose wife walked out on him
without explanation six months earlier. Jimmy (played
by Sean Penn), who served two years in prison for
theft, is happily married, has three daughters, and
is the proprietor of a convenience store. David (played
by Tim Robbins), still psychologically scarred, is
married and has a son. One day the murdered body
of Katie (played by Emmy Rossum), Sean's nineteen-year-old
daughter, is discovered in a park; the same day David
beats to death a child molester, whom he dumps into
the Mystic, but that body is not discovered. Sean
and his partner Whitey Powers (played by Laurence
Fishburne) are assigned the case about Katie, interview
various witnesses, match the murder gun to the father
of the dead girl's secret boyfriend, Val Savage (played
by Kevin Chapman), but cannot find a motive for the
crime. Jimmy, meanwhile, extremely upset over the
death of his daughter, is impatient that the investigation
is taking so long. Calling upon his two underworld
buddies to conduct an investigation of their own,
he concludes that David is guilty, though again no
motive is demonstrable. Pressured by Sean and his
goons to confess the crime, David admits that he
killed a child molester, but that does not satisfy
Jimmy. Meanwhile, Val goes home after intensive police
interrogation, only to discover that his father's
gun is not in the usual hiding place. He then confronts
his two younger brothers, and the motive for the
crime emerges. One of his brothers, having enjoyed
sex with him, was jealous of Katie, especially on
learning that the two planned to elope and get married
in Las Vegas. Police break into the boys' apartment
just in time, as one brother points the gun at Val,
but filmviewers will find out whether the police
act in time to prevent Jimmy from carrying out a
Mystic River homicide of David. An apparent reworking
of the true story told in Sleepers (1996), Mystic
River demonstrates
that the desire for revenge may produce criminal
acts in otherwise decent people, whether unleashed
because of the death of one's own child or due to
the long-lasting psychological effect of teenage
sexual abuse. MH
I
want to comment on this film |

Mystic River
by Dennis Lehane
Lehane
ventures beyond his acclaimed private eye series
with this emotionally wrenching crime drama about
the effects of a savage killing on a tightly knit,
blue-collar Boston neighborhood.
|