Movie
Review | Gothika
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- At the Woodward Penitentiary for Women, Dr.
Miranda Grey (Oscar-winner Halle Berry) is a highly respected criminal
psychologist who works with her husband (Charles S. Dutton), the chief
administrator of the psychiatric ward. Driving home late one stormy
night, she crashes her car to avoid hitting a distraught young girl
whose body mysteriously bursts into flames. When she awakens, Miranda
discovers she's incarcerated behind thick glass doors at Woodward and
accused of brutally killing her husband. While she realizes that the
ability to repress is a vital survival tool, the only people who will
listen to her distorted rantings are a sympathetic former colleague,
Dr. Pete Graham (Robert Downey Jr.), and a dangerously disturbed
patient, Chloe (Penelope Cruz), who seems to be having similar
difficulties distinguishing reality from fantasy.
At first, Miranda claims, "I am a rational person. I don't
believe in the paranormal and I don't believe in ghosts." Then,
after a few lurid hallucinations, it comes down to: "I'm not
deluded. I'm possessed." In-between are several silly dashes up
and down the atmospheric labyrinth of corridors as she desperately
tries to fit together the pieces of a bizarre psychological puzzle
that ultimately involves ludicrous sadistic torture and a strange
anima sola tattoo.
Written by Sebastian Gutierrez, directed by France's
Mathieu Kassovitz and photographed by Matthew Libatique, "Gothika"
chooses style over substance. Unintentional laughter is evoked, and
there's some heavy-duty irony watching seriously addicted actor Robert
Downey Jr. dispensing drugs. On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10,
"Gothika" loses its grip with a psychobabbling 4.
"Logic is over-rated," Miranda declares. Not when it comes
to ghost stories.
(Warner Bros.)
Grade: 4/10
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