Director : Barbara Kopple
Producer : Stewart Hall, John Morrissey, Jack F. Murphy
Screenwriter : Stephen Gaghan
Starring : Anne Hathaway, Bijou Phillips, Shiri Appleby, Michael Biehn, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Freddy RodrÃguez, Laura San Giacomo
Eventually, every girl grows up. Cinema dictates this. Sometimes, that move
into adulthood is seamless (see Jodie Foster, Claire Danes, Scarlett Johanssen,
Kirsten Dunst). Sometimes it is agonizingly painful (see the Olsen twins,
Hilary Duff, and -- arguably -- Drew Barrymore).
Sometimes it is as curious as all get-out (see Anne Hathaway in Havoc). I don't
know if I've ever seen a more radical departure of film roles than Hathaway's
decision to go from the Princess Diaries films to this one. Hathaway's former
work is almost unilaterally square in the rated-G realm. Her PG-rated movies
earned those ratings primarily due to events like Hathaway falling on her butt.
Havoc gives us Hathaway, topless within 10 minutes, and later visiting a
downtown L.A. gang's lair and begging to become one of them. Her best pal
(Bijou Phillips) consents to having sex with three of the gang bangers (now
there's a double entendre) as a rite of passage.
Something tells me Hathaway won't be making The Princess Diaries 3.
As for the film, it's surprisingly unmemorable. Hathaway plays Allison, a
spoiled rich girl from Pacific Palisades whose parents are never home (a mortal
sin in the world of cinema). To amuse herself she adopts a faux gangster
personality with her friends, and during a drug buy-gone-sour one night, she
becomes enamored with the real thing. That's it in a nutshell, though the story
is more about how alienated Allison is in the real world, and how her gangsta
persona is really just a sad put-on. Ultimately, a romance with gang leader
Hector (Freddy Rodriguez, unrecognizable from his clean-cut Six Feet Under
days) feels forced and wholly unrealistic, and it quickly grinds the film to a
sudden ending.
Written by Stephen Gaghan, the film has more in common with his lesser works
like Abandon than it does with his vaunted Traffic. And while the press has
focused on what a departure this is for Hathaway, less has been said of its
director: Oscar-winning documentarian Barbara Kopple (Harlan County, U.S.A.,
American Dream, Wild Man Blues), who creates her first and only narrative
feature film here, after 30 years in the business. While Kopple's done similar
work for TV shows like Oz, I was stunned to see how adept she was with what
amounts to an undeveloped script and a difficult story.
As for Hathaway, she proves without a doubt that she's been underutilized as an
actress for far too long. She wholly owns the picture -- especially over the
zoned-out Phillips. Here's hoping she doesn't have to get naked next time out
just to get people's attention. Not that I'm complaining...
| Write for us |
1st March 2006 23:25
G.pa | ||
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| It seems just lately that Anne's more exotic scenes in this film are being played down, Barbra Kopple stated when interviewed that no such scenes were filmed. Strange as stills of a much more explicit nature have been posted on the internet. Mind you non of the scenes from which these still were taken are included in the unrated version. There was certainly a great deal of hype prior to its release, of course there are some deleted scenes on this DVD, but to download them requires equiptment which most people wont have. Perhaps this director is worried that involving a very young and vunerable actress in a B movie when she was allready established as an A screne actress, she might now be in a position to seek recompence if this were to damage her reputation and jeapodise her future income. | ||
1st March 2006 23:24
G.pa | ||
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||
| It seems just lately that Anne's more exotic scenes in this film are being played down, Barbra Kopple stated when interviewed that no such scenes were filmed. Strange as stills of a much more explicit nature have been posted on the internet. Mind you non of the scenes from which these still were taken are included in the unrated version. There was certainly a great deal of hype prior to its release, of course there are some deleted scenes on this DVD, but to download them requires equiptment which most people wont have. Perhaps this director is worried that involving a very young and vunerable actress in a B movie when she was allready established as an A screne actress, she might now be in a position to seek recompence if this were to damage her reputation and jeapodise her future income. | ||
" OK "
Rating: R, 2005
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