Movie Review: In the Cut: Sex, Mess, Blood and Thin Ice
Published January 11, 2004
Sex, yes, plenty of that; but erotic? Depends what turns you on... Thriller? Well, yes, if you're into suspense that starts to slide off the rails halfway through and is rolling down a steep embankment long before the end!
I'd partly agree with an IMDB viewer's comment I read before going to see 'In the Cut' (Pathé site; Fr, with media in English):
"Don't watch it for the plot/story. Watch it to get a sense of what it feels like to live in New York, or lust after someone who's not really your type but intrigues you anyway. It's a very non-linear, artsy, right-brained exercise..." ('kellang').
Bright, mixed-up, sexy woman in her 30s (Meg Ryan) first meets clever, mixed-up police detective (Mark Ruffalo) when he questions her about a gruesome murder, falls for him, begins to wonder if he's a killer, but then it could always be...
The story by Susanna Moore, contains nothing spectacularly novel. Those who think the film a poor rendering of Moore's book might note that she co-wrote the screenplay with director Jane Campion, who gives us a competent, moderately good film.
Some have compared this with the late Andy Pakula's 'Klute' (IMDb), which I saw back in '72 and vaguely recall for the hot pairing of Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland with a dark decadence which would undoubtedly be dated today. I'd venture that in 30 years' time, 'In the Cut' might be less dated and less memorable. As in 'Klute', you don't see the murders — or "de-articulations" — but the blood, body parts and yuk! they leave in their wake are very much of our gory times.
Ryan plays Frannie, an English literature teacher who stumbles blindly into the most dangerous of dilemmas, driven by lust. I squirmed for her, though, in the train scenes where she spots lines of those subway poetry ads that mark modern métros — and reads the stuff out loud. Ouch!
For the rest, the movie somehow glides round most of the gaping clichés lying in wait and there were sufficient gasps in a packed house to indicate that not everybody saw some of the twists in a rickety plot well in advance (now out in France, soon on DVD).
- Movie Review: In the Cut: Sex, Mess, Blood and Thin Ice
- Published: January 11, 2004
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Drama, Video: Suspense and Mystery, Video: Urban
- Writer: Nick Barrett
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- Nick Barrett's personal site
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