Stars:
Josh Lucas, Jacqueline Bisset, Lukas HaasStoryline
During World War II, a Jewish woman saves her life thanks to a love affair with a doctor in charge of human experiments in a Nazi concentration camp. The woman then marries and moves to New York, where she raises two emotionally stunted sons. The eldest son battles his sense of disconnection from life while working at a scam modeling agency, where he befriends a charming young co-worker who begins to restore in him a sense of excitement and purpose. The neurotic younger son is locked in a compulsive, co-dependent relationship with his mother.User Reviews
Weak and indulgent film-making in all its gloryWhat happens when the
writer of some gems as "The Punisher", "Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights"
who also directed crap like "Uptown Girls" decides to write and direct
an artsy flick?
Death In Love is the answer. This film does not
pull any punch when it comes to gruesome and explicit scenes.
Writer/director Boaz Yakin had to finance this film all by himself
because he had specific things in mind. This would never have been
approved by studios and I understand why he got no financial backing.
Having a specific vision, refusing to compromise are all laudable as far
as I am concerned.
It's just that, unfortunately, Yakin's
vision seems terribly limited. So are his skills as a storyteller. The
founding story arc revolves around a Jewish girl who begins an affair
with a doctor overseeing experiments on human in a concentration camp
during WWII. Yakin goes all guns blazing trying to showcase the
intensity of this relationship and fails spectacularly because there is a
total lack of chemistry between the actors and the script is
emotionally numb right from the start. She just supposedly falls in love
at first sight, with a psycho doctor who looks like an extra in an
infomercial.
The second story arc (which gets the most screen
time) takes place in the present and features this woman again with her
husband and two adult sons. All of which seem to be mysteriously as nuts
as she is for no reason whatsoever.
In between, we get
flashbacks from the time her sons were children and how she'd go nuts
and scare them, but it's done awkwardly, like what you'd expect in a
direct to video "it happened for real" melodrama featuring Melissa
Gilbert or some other has-been.
The present-day story arc
features the most interesting and intriguing scenes. The youngest son
(Lukas Haas) is a total waste of screen time as an obnoxious man-child
who has various phobias and still live with his parent. But the eldest
son (Josh Lucas) gets a lot of screen time. He's almost 40 years old,
seemingly jaded about everything. Of lot of his scenes (particularly
with his co-worker played by Adam Brody) feature dialogue that, while
not amazing, is still better than what the rest of the movie has to
offer.
There are a few themes displayed but Yakin, in the least
subtle way EVER implies a strong connection between pain and sexuality.
In fact, so strong that he almost implies one is synonymous with the
other. This could be a powerful and interesting theme to explore in a
few characters but here, it's just not done well. Every character on
screen has intense desire to masturbate, and it seems nobody is able to
make love without beating his partner at the same time. It's just...
amateurish. The story and characters feel artificial despite all the
courageous grit Yakin put in the film.
There is also a strong
undercurrent of self-loathing in all the main characters. Yakin is
Jewish himself and I sensed that he was extremely critical of a segment
of people who shun their origins and hate what they are. And I can
appreciate his attempt to highlight that. one of the most powerful
scene, to me, was a small one where the Jewish girl at the concentration
camp (who receives favorable treatment from the doctor, her lover)
refuses to give the rest of her meal to a starving Jewish violinist.
Instead, she sadistically eats every last crumb, as if she renounced her
Jewish heritage and what she really is.
All in all, I think
Yakin tackled powerful issues in a very confusing way. This feels like a
very personal film but unfortunately, the few powerful scenes in there,
the great performances by Lucas, Bisset and Haas and the grittiness
can't save a weak script and a weak story.
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