Crime + Punishment in Suburbia Movie Review
Crime + Punishment in Suburbia Review
"Crime + Punishment in Suburbia" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Rob SchmidtProducer : Larry Gross,Pamela Koffler,Christine Vachon
Screenwiter : Larry Gross
Starring : Monica Keena,Ellen Barkin,Michael Ironside,Vincent Kartheiser,James DeBello,Jeffrey Wright,Blake Shields,Conchata Ferrell
If you're seeking enlightenment on what you think would be a modern
reverberation on the timeless Fyodor Dostoyevsky masterpiece, don’t be misled
by Crime + Punishment in Suburbia. While the film opens with a quotation from
Crime and Punishment, which, I suppose, is intended to lead us to a new
interpretation of the book, that's the only (tenuous) connection. In the
novel, the protagonist, Raskolnikov, rebels against the morality imposed on him
by a society and kills an innocent woman. He later discovers that the worst
punishment for the murder was the one his guilty conscience made him to
endure. And perhaps, if you concentrate hard enough, the suffering Raskolnikov
could conceivably parallel that of a pudgy adolescent Roseanne (Monica Keena,
ex of Dawson's Creek), one of the main characters in the movie.
Completed before American Beauty, this artificial little movie resembles it in
every way possible, mainly because it examines the very same set of stereotypes
about malfunctioning wealthy suburbanites. Vincent (Vincent Kartheiser), a
sallow loner, follows Roseanne everywhere with his camera. Given the privilege
to provide voice-over for most of the film, we hope that he is the voice of
wisdom, or at least revelation in the story. Far from it: His philosophy is
one of a self-possessed New Age spiritual guru who is convinced he can save
Roseanne from hell she is living in. What Ricky was able to see with his lens
in American Beauty revealed the hidden layers of human behavior. Vincent, by
comparison, as well as the whole ensemble of characters in Crime + Punishment,
goes through the plot’s twists and turns without a single coherent thought in
his head.
The genre of the film is familiar -- using the suburbs as an emotional terrain
where the sense of unwholesomeness surrounds the surfaces of people’s life and
threatens their seemingly secure shelters. In Roseanne’s family, we have a
complete set of obvious characters: a psychopathic stepfather (Michael
Ironside) with a face of a bulldog and a penchant for heavy drinking, a
frustrated and suffering mother (Ellen Barkin), and a vacuous, popular little
girl who dates a football player (James DeBello). What follows is supposed to
be a tragedy of revelations, in which a gloomy loner Vincent will help Roseanne
rediscover herself and alter her perception of the world forever. Supposed to
be.
What attracted me the most in American Beauty was how punchy and derisive --
yet humane -- the film was. It carried a deep loss for the human connection, a
charge that gave the film its integrity, the weight of reality. The humorless
Crime + Punishment substitutes this depth with a slow motion camera, elaborate
soundtrack, suggestive visual themes, and a stupid voice over.
To completely befuddle us, the film switches from Vincent’s voice over to
Roseanne’s. In a chillingly dispassionate voice, she narrates from jail and
says how much she enjoys her non-existence. “I killed somebody. I was sorry.
It changed nothing.” When freed, she follows Vincent as her savior and
marvels, “What a strange path it took to find my heart.” But first, you have
had to believe that she even has one.
Reviewer: Julia Levin



