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(1999) rt: 119m ***½
Director: Mark Pellington
Starring: Jeff Bridges, Tim Robbins, Joan Cusack, Hope Davis
Tagline: Fear thy neighbor
Arlington Road is a nice
little suburban paranoia meets domestic terrorism film that keeps
you guessing to the very end. The problem is there are too many "oh,
come on" moments along the way. I spent a lot of the film thinking
there were entirely too many wacky coincidences to make anything plausible.
Contrivance through coincidences is usually a huge sign of lazy writing.
So, I was sitting there getting annoyed at what I thought were just
ridiculous instances of dumb luck, but little did I know a lot of
what is happening is actually planned by the bad guy. The writers
do a decent job of tying up most of the coincidences at the end, but
by that time I had already started deducting stars. Actually the ending
really saved this movie for me. It went so against Hollywood convention,
it's shocking somebody at the studio didn't' put the kibosh on it.
You know, just for that, I'm adding an extra half star. Maybe I should
deduct it again, as I was once unwittingly duped into doing free work
for the director, Mark Pellington, when I was working at a commercial/music
video production company a few years back. His producer, Tom Gorai,
had an assistant who left, and he somehow finagled me into doing producer's
assistant things for him and Mark, when I was in fact supposed to
be working for the production company and not for his side projects,
which I think turned out to be a movie called Destination Anywhere,
starring Jon Bon Jovi. Anyway, I was just in awe that the director
of Pearl Jam's Jeremy video would have me doing stuff for
him, that I ignored his blatant lies about this being a project connected
with the production company. Anyway, a few years later I saw Pellington
on a subway, and pointed him out to my now wife, telling her that
he directed Jeremy, and that he's a really nice guy (he actually
is). He proceeded to drunkenly exit the train, drop his drawers and
piss on a dumpster at the 23rd street stop. Classy. So, I digress.
Despite Pellington's lack of peeing judgement, and somewhat suspect
business practices with $400 a week production assistants, he did
a pretty decent job directing this film. The feeling is at the same
time glossy Hollywood and indie shaky-cam. Try hard, you'll be able
to picture it. If you've ever seen a Jeff Bridges movie, you know
exactly what to expect from him. He mumbles through his lines, looks
incredibly disheveled, and has this weird buggy eyed thing that he
does to convey fright and craziness. At times during the movie, I
felt as though I could have been watching a million other thriller
flicks, especially Bridges other mad bomber flick, Blown Away.
I used to hate Bridges, especially after seeing him in the horrendously
horrible Fearless, but he's grown on me incredibly after
he appeared as "The Dude" in The Big Lebowski. Come to think
of it, he plays downtrodden and sloppy in The Fisher King
too. I guess the guy is a little typecast, but he does an admirable
job as the paranoid professor of terrorism. Tim Robbins is a weird
guy. I think he does just about everything to avoid being typecast.
He could have easily gone for all the dopey guy rolls after Bull
Durham, but has really switched it up, choosing the amazing part
in The Shawshank Redemption, evil politician in Bob Roberts,
tormented soul in Jacob's Ladder and The Player,
back to wide-eyed innocent in The Hudsucker Proxy, and now
brilliant, disturbing terrorist in this film. Despite a few clunkers
along the way, (the Scott Rudin (uuuh, douchebag!) produced I.Q.)
he's done an admirable job of picking good, varied roles for himself.
Here he is the baby-faced suburbanite with the respectable job, who
is married to the Stepford wife (Joan Cusack). The casting could have
so easily gone the other way, with the incredibly innocent looking
Robbins playing the college professor who is tortured with his knowledge
of the evil things his neighbor is plotting, and the wild looking,
stammering Bridges playing the anti-government terrorist. Oh well,
I guess that's why I'm not a casting agent, and Ellen Chenoweth is.
There was an alternate ending to this film that keeps the non-Hollywood
ending, but gives a glimmer of that Hollywood tinge. According to
the audio notes on the DVD, this ending was edited out due to time,
but I think Pellington wanted to truly shock the audience by giving
them absolutely none of those good feelings we expect to get when
leaving the theater. [DVD, MF]
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