I read the book.
This summer there was a piddling amount of good movies for
adults (I almost said adult movies) from the major studios. So when a movie
based on a huge best seller with an A list cast hits the big screen it was the
go to movie. The movie is worth seeing, but there are short comings. The plot
is intriguing and helps numb the two and half hour run time. Simply put the
wife is gone and what happened to her and the search for her is the crux of the
story. As with all good mysteries there are sub plots and twists that weave
throughout the story. There will be no awards for acting in this movie. No one
broke a sweat. Even the sex scenes were tepid rather than steamy.
Ben Affleck is Nick Dunne. Nick has crushing good looks and women
are at his disposal. Throughout the movie Nick has a calm demeanor even when discovering
his wife is missing; this role is a cake walk for Affleck. His interactions
with his wife are spirited and she often incites him. She is smarter than Nick and
manipulates him. Nick is a victim of his
own limitations. The dynamics and dysfunctions of their marriage is the foundation
of the movie.
Rosamund Pike is Nick’s wife. I first saw Pike in the Bond
movie “Die Another Day” where she played a double
agent and turns on Bond. With her fine porcelain looks and blond mane she looks
as threatening as a kitten waking up from a nap. She is well suited to play Amy
Dunne Elliot. Amy is a sophisticated, rich and a smart beautiful Manhattanite. She
also is a pathological controlling perfectionist freak. She is devoid of guilt
and she can really hold a grudge.
Pike plays the role well with an eerie claim and detachment.
The movie takes some detours from the book. Tyler Perry plays
Nick’s lawyer Tanner Bolt. In the book Tanner is a sleazy high prolife white lawyer
who has a stunning six foot tall black wife. Here we get half the deal, sans
high heels. Perry is his usual swaggering confident self; no sweat here either.
The strangest casting is Neil Patrick Harris. He is Amy’s
old boyfriend Desi Collings, who has an overly obsessive attraction to Amy and
stalks her. How can someone that looks like a stick figure be intimidating? If there was a death match between Amy and
Desi, I would take Amy hands down.
Other fine actors contributed. Inspector Boney had a bigger
role in the movie that the book and she was crucial to the film. His sister Go
(Margo) was cast well in the movie compared to the book, she brought some much
needed humor.
Even with these short comings you should see the movie.
No comments:
Post a Comment