Femme Fatale Movie Review
Femme Fatale Review

"Femme Fatale" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Brian De PalmaProducer : Marina Gefter
Screenwiter : Brian De Palma
Starring Rebecca Romijn Stamos, Antonio Banderas, Peter Coyote, Eriq Ebouaney
The only thing worse than a bad movie is a bad movie that takes itself
seriously. Not only is your intelligence insulted, but the director is revealed
to be a snob as well as a failure. And worst of all, the film is usually
boring.
Femme Fatale is an exception to this to this rule. There is no question that
Brian De Palma’s latest is a steaming pile, and you can smell smug all over
what he thinks are clever film techniques (split screens, operatic slow motion,
etc). But just before I started throwing stuff at the screen in a show of
displeasure, something magical happened—I laughed. And once I started laughing
at Femme Fatale, I couldn’t stop. The resentment felt for losing two hours of
my life to this confused, badly acted, illogical, exploitative jewel
heist-cum-meditation on fate was replaced with the giddy revelation that I had
become involved in a cinematic experience on par with Paul Verhoeven’s
Showgirls.
Rebecca Romijn-Stamos plays Laure Ash, a double-crossing bisexual jewel thief
who bails on her partners after stealing a fortune in custom-made jewelry from
a beautiful attendee of the Cannes film festival -- but not before engaging in
some extended, studiously photographed girl-on-girl action in the theater
bathroom. On the run from her partners, Laure finds herself hiding in the
closet of a woman on the brink of suicide. It just so happens that this woman
looks just like her, and has a valid passport and a ticket to the United States
for that afternoon. Talk about being in the right place at the right time!
During her escape she meets a software millionaire (Peter Coyote), and they
instantly fall in love.
Seven years later, Ash finds herself back in Paris against her will with her
recently appointed ambassador husband, living a life of privilege and
self-imposed isolation. When a photo taken by a down and out
paparazzi-turned-artist-turned-paparazzi (Antonio Banderas) is plastered all
over Paris (and why not, aren’t we all fascinated by the lives of ambassadors’
wives?) Ash finds her new life in jeopardy as her one-time jewel thief partners
close in to collect on unpaid debts. So begins a series of incomprehensible
chases, blackmails, kidnappings, etc. that culminates in the use of one of the
most terrible and artificial narrative devices in the history of storytelling.
Think Bobby Ewing and you’ll get the idea.
Femme Fatale freely careens between clichéd and absurd. Romijn-Stamos delivers
inanities like “I’m a bad girl, a really bad girl” with an appropriate absence
of fire and authenticity. It is difficult for anyone to nonchalantly deliver
lines like “You don’t have to lick my ass; just fuck me,” but listening to
Romijn-Stamos force such dreck through cheesecloth-thin acting talent makes you
long for her silent performance in X-Men.
Commercials for Femme Fatale call De Palma “The master of the erotic thriller.”
He’s a master all right. Allowing his camera to linger on Romijn-Stamos’s body
to an embarrassing degree, all eroticism destroyed by the nearly audible sound
of the director masturbating just off-screen. The results are not sexy, just
distasteful -- like getting turned by the thought of Gina Gershon eating dog
food.
But this all culminates into such a bad, self-satisfied film that you can’t
help but marvel, and laugh, at it. Antonio Banderas appears to understand what
a crap movie this is, and it looks like he is having fun along the way. He
tries on an effeminate lisp and limp wrist for what would be an offensive gay
stereotype if he didn’t play it with such abandon. Banderas doesn’t attempt to
give a career-making performance like Romijn-Stamos appears to be. He’s trying
to amuse himself until this train wreck of a film comes to a halt. Just like
the audience.
Reviewed at the 2002 Mill Valley Film Festival.
Phlegm fatale.
Reviewer: Aaron Lazenby





