A Slipping-Down Life Movie Review
A Slipping-Down Life Review

"A Slipping-Down Life" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Toni KalemProducer : Richard Raddon
Screenwiter : Toni Kalem
Starring : Lili Taylor,Guy Pearce,John Hawkes,Sara Rue,Shawnee Smith,Veronica Cartwright
In the kind of town people tend to think of leaving, a timid young woman
leading a monotonous life suddenly flips into a mode of uncharacteristic
spontaneity when she discovers a local honky-tonk singer with an attitude that
rings her bell.
Evie Decker (Lili Taylor) lives with her sedentary and semi-senile father (Tom
Bower) in a modest house on an uneventful street (shot around Austin, Texas)
and works in a demeaning job at a rundown amusement park. Her moment of magic
comes when, on a radio interview, the voice of struggling musician Drumstrings
Casey (the cheeky faced Guy Pearce) says things that the interviewer has no
possibility of relating to but with which Evie is in perfect harmony. He has
plucked the right chord on her heartstrings and she wastes no time getting down
to see him perform at the roadhouse with her closest friend, Violet (Sara Rue).
Casey has a strong, wily voice, songs that imply protest, and a delivery that
is the country rebel at work. He pretty much disregards his audience's need for
a continuous beat, shifting his rhythms and lapsing into spoken message as his
mood moves him. The intense emotion he brings into his songs as well as his
lean, macho rawness is a gripping experience for Evie, who is thunderstruck.
Casey, of course, doesn't know Evie from E-flat.
Finding new energy in having an object of fascination, she thinks of little
else but her struggling artist, and soon her boss is threatening to fire her
because of lack of concentration on her work. She follows Casey to his daytime
job only to discover that he's got a girlfriend, but jealousy won't keep her
from attending his shows.
Led by her obsession, she decides it needs to go to a higher level. She stands
at a restroom mirror and cuts his name on her forehead with a piece of glass.
“Casey.” Backwards. Drenched in blood, she shocks everyone and is whisked off
to the hospital. Stitches are applied and she's soon the town's most infamous
citizen. Capitalizing on the sudden, if bizarre, interest, Casey's
manager-drummer, David Elliot (John Hawkes) arranges a bedside newspaper
interview with a visit by Casey himself.
To his credit, he's sensitive to her, almost tender. Best of all, she's on the
brooding musician's radar screen now -- her drastic act has had its intended
effect. Her complete faith in the potentials of Casey's unique talent and her
straightforward sincerity increases her effect on him, putting aside a tendency
toward extremes of behavior. And when the media attention fades, she volunteers
to display her forehead art at Casey's shows to bring him the benefit of
whatever attention she still draws from her remaining notoriety. Eventually,
the public attraction wears off but the personal one doesn't.
While Lili Taylor is an actress with a considerable body of work (Casa de los
Babys, High Fidelity, rarely does she get to carry a picture. When it does
happen, it's going to be in a character piece for which her dimensions of
vulnerability and inner strength play a part in giving life to the aspects of a
role. In this case, she almost makes sensible the desperate action of repressed
devotion, but it's a stretch, and not quite enough to overcome a script that
fails to clarify whether we're dealing with dementia, disability, or lonely
desperation. Taylor maintains a level of sympathy for her troubled character
despite writer-director Toni Kalem's unsparkling dramatic context.
Pearce continues to show up sparingly in low budget projects that call for a
shot of charisma to boost the ordinary. Here he puts his singing talent and
finely tuned moodiness to work to evoke a portrait of a self-absorbed artist
forced by love to relate to someone. He makes the portrayal fit like a
broken-in glove and, together, the co-stars mine the situation for nuggets of
wry humor.
A Slipping-Down Life was made in 1999 and only now has it received theatrical
distribution, confirming how unmomentous it's been to distributors. If you
don't want to wait for this crazy concept of courtship to hit the video bins,
get to the theatre while you have a chance. At the least, you'll get to see how
Pearce rocks on Robyn Hitchcock's nicely jumping folk-style song "Elizabeth
Jade," for me the highlight of the gig.
A slipping down skirt.
Reviewer: Jules Brenner





