Movie
Review | Wicker Park
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- Back in 1996, there was this dandy French
thriller called "L'Appartement" which screenwriter Brandon
Boyce ("Apt Pupil") and director Paul McGuigan ("The
Reckoning") have adapted into this melancholy, lightweight,
less-than-thrilling stalker tale set in snowy Chicago.
Bland Josh Hartnett, who was given a
big publicity push as Hollywood's next big heartthrob in "Pearl
Harbor" and "Hollywood Homicide," stars as Matthew, a
morose, lovesick dolt. Just before embarking on an important business
trip to Shanghai, this young investment banker overhears a
conversation in a restaurant phone booth and thinks he recognizes his
long-lost love Lisa (Diane Kruger a.k.a. Helen in "Troy").
Desperate to track her down, he jettisons his current fiancée
(Jessica Pare) and career to find this woman, a dancer, who vanished
without a trace two years earlier. But the Lisa he discovers is a
different person. She's an actress named Alex (Rose Byrne), the
girl-friend of Luke (Matthew Lillard), who's Matthew's best-friend.
Confused? Yeah.
The fragmented action of this frenzied
psychological drama about jealousy, betrayal and improbable
coincidences jumps back and forth in time, reflecting different
character's points of view. The title comes from the Chicago
neighborhood in which all this occurs, even though much of the filming
was done in Montreal. In a subtle tribute to writer/director Gilles
Mimouni's "L'Appartement," the pivotal restaurant is called
Belluci's, since that film starred Monica Belluci and Vincent Cassel,
and Paul McGuigan evokes memories of Hitchcock's camerawork. On the
Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, "Wicker Park" is a
convoluted, obsessive, exasperating 4. "Love makes people
do crazy things" says one character. And this "sticky
wicker" is one of them.
Grade: 4/10
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