Gray Matters Movie Review
Gray Matters Review

"Gray Matters" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Sue KramerProducer : Jill Footlick,John J. Hermansen,Sue Kramer
Screenwiter : Sue Kramer
Starring : Heather Graham,Thomas Cavanagh,Bridget Moynahan,Molly Shannon,Alan Cumming,Sissy Spacek
The setup isn't bad. A man (Thomas Cavanagh) and woman (Heather Graham) start
the film in a ballroom dance rehearsal space, performing a heavily-practiced
number. Probably something for their wedding reception, right? They go on a
quick jog together, then return home, pooped. Later, they're at a dinner party,
sitting side by side. One guest asks how long they've been together. Gulp!
They're not a couple, they're brother and sister! Oh snap!
Just when you think this is going to be a strange kind of incest comedy, the
film soon turns into something else (a standard rom-com), as the pair runs into
Charlie (Bridget Moynahan), walking her dog. Oh, she's such a great lady that
Sam (Cavanagh) proposes that same night. And she accepts! It's off to Vegas
where sis Gray (Graham) and Charlie room together for the night. Long story
short: Gray kisses Charlie on the lips and suddenly realizes she is gay,
explaining 20 years of boy trouble in one fell swoop.
Whoops! The film is now a lesbian-coming-out comedy. The whole brother/sister
thing is pushed under the rug. It isn't long before Charlie is almost out of
the picture altogether. Instead Gray hangs out with a cab driver (Alan Cumming)
and visits a gay bar for the first time. It's saying something when Cumming
appearing in drag is the highlight of the film.
Gray Matters goes from so-so to heart-crushingly bad over its hour and a half
running time, chipping away at logic, comedy, and entertainment value as it
delves more and more into the character we care about the least. Gray is a
shallow, hyperactive spaz, an insecure New Yorker that's become one of cinema's
biggest cliches in the last few years. Where the movie takes chances (Sissy
Spacek as a therapist who only treats Gray in odd locations, like a bowling
alley), they come off as gimmicks rather than entertainment.
Oddly enough, Cavanagh and Moynahan seem like a fun couple and might even merit
a movie treatment. However their 10 minutes of screen time never really amounts
to much. Instead we get a vapid Gray at her job, Gray atop the New Yorker
building, Gray OCDing over her food order, Gray lusting after a girl at a hot
dog stand. Gray's matters are pretty mundane, to tell you the truth.
DVD special features include a making-of featurette.
Meow.
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Review by Christopher Null
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