Dolores Claiborne Movie Review
Dolores Claiborne Review
"Dolores Claiborne" Overview

Rating: R
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Taylor HackfordProducer : Taylor Hackford,Charles Mulvehill
Screenwiter : Tony Gilroy
Starring : Kathy Bates,Jennifer Jason Leigh,Christopher Plummer,David Strathairn
Kathy Bates and Jennifer Jason Leigh have returned in a new Steven King film,
Dolores Claiborne. Another departure from typical King fare, this is a tense
psychological drama and character study, akin to last year's The Shawshank
Redemption (also based on his work).
Set on a depressed and perpetually wet island off the coast of Maine, Dolores
Claiborne (Bates) is the focus of the film. Looming in her past is a secret:
she may or may not have killed her abusive husband (played in flashbacks by
David Strathairn). In the present, Dolores has apparently been driven to
madness by her husband and her employer Vera, the elderly woman for whom
Dolores nursemaids. At the film's opening, we are presented with what appears
to be Vera's death by Dolores's weathered hands.
This all sets the tone for the ensuing investigation, in which Christopher
Plummer plays the investigator "thwarted" by Dolores during his investigation
of her husband's death 18 years earlier. Selena (Leigh), Dolores's similarly
insane daughter shows up to help out in the crisis.
What follows is pretty much predictable. After a promising start, the film
begins to rely on way-over-the-top acting, culminating in the worst courtroom
scene in years, to get its point across (basically: abuse is bad). Clocking
in at well over two hours, Dolores Claiborne is far too long for the audience
to stare at the same dull grey sky and dead landscapes, while its stars deadpan
for the camera.
Thematically simplistic, Dolores Claiborne is a mildly interesting story with
some memorable characters. It's not what we've come to expect from King, and
it is a step in the right direction, away from the author's customary schlock
horror. But with another King story playing in theaters now as well (The
Mangler), it doesn't look like he's changed his evil ways.
|
Review by Christopher Null
|






