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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
Mr. Brooks (Bruce A. Evans)
Addiction can wreak havoc with our lives. It
caused me to make a stop at King Soopers on the
way home from the movie to get my cereal fix:
Kashi Vive, soy milk and frozen berries. Laughably
tame and lame compared to an addiction to murder,
and done with no intent of being ironic.
Almost as laughable is going to AA meetings in
order to tame one’s addiction to taking
other people’s lives on a regular basis,
but that is what torments Kevin Costner’s
character, serial murderer and man-about-town,
Earl Brooks. But logic is overshadowed
by his desperate attempts to rid himself of the
need to kill, that he’ll go to any measure,
including repeating the Act of Contrition at times
when he feels weak.
At the beginning of the film you see Brooks at
an award dinner held in his honor as man of the
year by the city of Portland. He’s a successful
business man, philanthropist, husband and father.
A true man of the community, who just happens
to have another man that he’s name Marshall
on his back, the sinister voice in his head, played
perfectly by William Hurt.
But all the prayers and “hi my name is”
meetings just don’t cut it after a while.
Marshall’s strength overshadows it all attempts
at being “normal,” breaking Brook’s
two year hiatus as the Thumbprint Killer. With
precision and attention to detail, very similar
to the Patrick Bateman character in American
Psycho, he leaves no trace of his doings…until
one night where he slips on one of his concrete
rules.
With as much passion and persistence, detective
Tracy Atwood (Demi Moore),
follows a hunch with the little evidence she can
find. This leads her to Dane Cook
as Mr. Smith, a potential witness
to one of Brook’s murders.
Cook plays a good slimy guy in his first serious
role (or first actual role…did anyone see
that Sam’s Club movie he was in? What the
hell...), using his comedic side only when the
script called for it, and in those cases, the
joke was on him. A mechanical engineer by day,
Smith hungers for more exciting adventures. So
he plays the witness card to finagle his way into
Brooks’ game.
On the other hand, Atwood’s going-through-a-nasty-divorce
story seems to be thrown in for good measure in
the "and we care because..."
category, with the exception of how Brooks uses
her personal circumstances and history to orchestrate
his next series of murders. There were some eye-candy
occassions when her ex appeared, played by Jason
Lewis. As usual, he's just the same pretty
face he was in Sex and the City (Smith Jerod),
and is best seen in a no-speaking role, stretched
out in his Calvin Klein Ys for all to see in Times
Square.
While Brooks performs his craft at night, his
daytime reality intrudes as he deals with his
daughter’s (Danielle Panabaker)
sins. In his typical fashion, he cleans up her
messes with a fear that someday his actions will
come back to haunt him.
All the while, Marshall is not only the part
of Brooks that pays attention to detail and gathers
the facts; he acts as the shoulder to cry on during
times when a typical person would turn to their
best friend for comfort, not their alter ego.
But with no one else to turn to, what's a guy
to do? Camera works is use to create a fluidity
between Brooks and Marshall, in subtle ways that
are effective in their connected-at-dthe-hip presence.
Written by Bruce A. Evans and Raynold Gideon,
and directed by Evans, the movie excels at toying
with one’s emotions from beginning to end.
First you’re holding your breath and curled
up in your seat, and then you’re laughing
at the dark, sadistic humor written in sparingly,
and then you’re jerked back with heart beating
surprises (which at times also caused the audience
to laugh, albeit nervously).
Hurt did his sly act, which is not a stretch
for him, but one he plays so very, very well.
I’ve never been a big fan of Costner, especially
when I think of him in Robin Hood (a Robin Hood
without a British accent? Who's idea was that?),
but he did this movie well with his performance,
as did Cook.
As I left the theater I heard one girl say she
couldn’t watch the end. Yes, there were
a number of “watching in between your fingers
that are covering your face” moments. But
for God's sakes, just keep the fingers spread
out until the credits roll, k?
www.theressomethingaboutmrbrooks.com
-Kim Owens, June 1, 2007
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