2 Days in the Valley Movie Review
2 Days in the Valley Review

"2 Days in the Valley" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : John HerzfeldProducer : Jeff Walkd,Herb Nanas
Screenwiter : John Herzfeld
Starring : Danny Aiello,Greg Cruttwell,Jeff Daniels,Teri Hatcher,Glenne Headly,Peter Horton,Marsha Mason,Paul Mazursky,James Spader,Eric Stoltz,Charlize Theron
If you've seen the trailer, the #1 question on your mind about 2 Days in the
Valley must be: Is it a Pulp Fictionrip-off, or is it a bad Pulp Fiction
rip-off?
Well, the answer is this: Yes, it's a shameless Pulp Fictionrip-off (more like
Pulp Fiction meets Short Cuts), but it's actually quite entertaining, in its
own quirky little way.
In fact, 2 Days in the Valley is the best (and possibly the last [hint, hint])
of these knockoffs to come down the interstate. The only problem is that
writer/director John Herzfeld forgot one critical part: a cool soundtrack!
The main difficult with 2 Days is an uncommonly lousy score that kills the
suspense and the comedy with equal ability.
But let's talk about the good parts, those mainly being the rich characters
Herzfeld has created to act out his play. (Please pay attention.) It starts
with Peter Horton (gets shot early on, a very big plus) as a deadbeat husband
to downhill skier/aspiring scam artist Teri Hatcher. James Spader (by far the
most fun of the film) and newcomer Charlize Theron as Hatcher's partners in
crime. Danny Aiello as an aging hitman working with Spader. Naked's Greg
Cruttwell as Aiello's whining hostage. Glenne Headly as Cruttwell's bookish
assistant. Marsha Mason as Cruttwell's nurse/half-sister. Paul Mazursky as a
suicidal Hollywood has-been who is picked up by Mason. And Jeff Daniels and
Eric Stoltz (the only Pulp veteran in the show) as hapless cops on to all of
these characters. (Plus there are at least three good cameos.)
Whew! D'you catch all that? It's easier than it sounds, trust me -- in fact,
the fun of 2 Days is watching all the pieces come together via a mixture of
slapstick comedy, generally witty dialogue, and blackly comedic gunfights,
fistfights, dogfights, catfights, and any other kind of fight you can think
of. All the while, Herzfeld manages to weave in unexpectedly powerful themes
of bygone happiness, greed, and desperation... and The Valley. And Herzfeld
manages to pack all of this into a very tight 105 minutes. There's very little
wasted footage on the screen, which is hard to say about many directors today.
It winds up as a solid picture that is probably accessible to a wider audience
than Pulp Fiction was -- there were plenty of squeamish girly types in the
crowd, and no one walked out. And I was actually expecting a bad movie! Go
figure.
[Food for thought: When was the last time you could get gas in Los Angeles for
$1.07, as is seen in the film? Talk amongst yourselves.]
The line: Hatcher in 6 rounds. Never mind MGM's typo (it's Theron, not
Heron).
Reviewer: Christopher Null





