Arlington Road Movie Review
Arlington Road Review

"Arlington Road" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Mark PellingtonProducer : Tom Gorai,Marc Samuelson,Peter Samuelson
Screenwiter : Ehren Kruger
Starring : Jeff Bridges,Tim Robbins,Joan Cusack,Hope Davis,Robert Gossett,Mason Gamble
Thrillers can be really bad. When was the last time you saw a good thriller?
It takes sound acting, a creative premise and most of all, suspense. Arlington
Road, the new film starring Jeff Bridges and Tim Robbins, has a paranoia factor
set in. There are many moments in this movie where I felt paranoid and creepy
(and this was after I saw Eyes Wide Shut).
Jeff Bridges stars as Michael Faraday, and teacher at George Washington
University who teaches a course on American Terrorism. Some people think that
this was convenient given the plot of the film, but I think that it’s a way of
already instilling a sense of fear and uncertainty. In the first scene,
Faraday rescues a young boy who had lit some fireworks and forgot to throw
them. The boy is coincidentally the son of their neighbors, Oliver and Cheryl
Lang (Tim Robbins and Joan Cusack, both extremely creepy and frightening).
After some hunches about Oliver, Michael starts to do some investigating and
what he turns up is not pretty.
I am surprised that Tim Robbins hasn’t played many villains before. Everything
down to the serious, intimidating looks on his face just scream evil.
Although, he does have a lot of range as an actor, he can play both good guy
and bad guy. Joan Cusack scared the bejesus out of me with her sinister smile
that never seemed sinister on screen before. Both these actors are excellent
and key to the flow of the movie.
As for Bridges, his intentions are good but I don’t think that he’s right for
the part. He’s a great actor, but it’s hard for him to be emotional without
someone laughing at him. Faraday is a man who is scared; even when there’s
nothing to be scared about. I just didn’t buy him in this role.
This is a top-notch thriller that kept me wanting more. I’m usually not taken
or frightened by thrillers but this one had me on the edge of my seat the whole
time, right up until the refreshingly creative surprise ending.
Peeping Jeff.
Reviewer: Matt Lawrence





