Indecent Proposal Movie Review
Indecent Proposal Review
"Indecent Proposal" Overview

Rating: R
1993
Cast and Crew
Director : Adrian LyneProducer : Sherry Lansing
Screenwiter : Amy Holden Jones
Starring : Robert Redford,Demi Moore,Woody Harrelson,Oliver Platt,Seymour Cassel
There are great erotic film experiences and wrenching emotional film
experiences. Indecent Proposal tries awkwardly to be both and ends up as
neither. Perhaps, with a premise so salaciously bent on hidden desires, the
filmmakers thought a maudlin tale of deep love would be the perfect
counterbalance. Instead, the film is an uneasy mixture of overwrought soap
opera and softcore eroticism. The soap opera outweighs the eroticism and drowns
the movie, but even the awkwardly placed sex scenes are so heavy-handed they
can't keep things afloat. Here is a movie simultaneously preoccupied with
getting viewers hot and bothered and manipulating them into ambivalent
emotional turmoil. The combination is not very arousing.
The zesty, scandalous plot device at the center of the film and the sole reason
the movie became a fairly big hit in 1993 can be summed up in one line:
"Suppose... I were to offer you one million dollars for one night with your
wife." And yes, that surface exposition is intriguing in its glossy,
high-concept way. But in truth, the appeal of that tantalizing conundrum gets
lost in a muddle of a screenplay that really is not about that spicy
million-dollar offer, but rather a tepid, long-winded story of a relationship
tested by temptation. In theory, the material could work. In practice, Indecent
Proposal is a bland, melodramatic sit.
Demi Moore and Woody Harrelson are Diana and David, who have been married for
several years and whose bond is so strong it could only be broken by... well, a
need for money so desperate that David would sell Diana off to a billionaire
for a night. The couple met in high school, fell in love, and built a life
together while pursuing their individual dreams. For Diana, it was real estate;
for David, architecture. They combine their passions to develop their dream
house: a large beachfront property in Santa Monica. They take out loans, invest
their money, and pour their lives into the project -- until a recession hits,
finances collapse, and David and Diana find themselves $50,000(!) in debt. All
of this is, of course, a labored setup for the million-dollar question,
conveyed in some pretty dense, uninteresting narration that replaces legitimate
human drama with the languorous verbal explanation of a novel. That's
understandable, since the film is based on a novel by Jack Engelhard, but not
acceptable, because film should be able to convey its details visually, not
through endless off-screen ramblings.
When the narration finally stops, David gets an idea: Take $5,000 to Vegas and
magically turn it into enough to erase all the debt and make everything right.
Since we know the "indecent proposal" is still on the horizon, we know this
plan will fail. But the movie still wades through a good 20 minutes of success,
in which the couple wins $25,000 in one night, act as if they are invincible,
have sex on a pile of money, and then promptly lose it all shortly thereafter.
Enter John Gage (Robert Redford), a well-known, distinguished billionaire who
treats Vegas casinos like giant piggy banks. Gage takes an immediate interest
in Diana, and soon he is cornering the couple in his luxurious suite, offering
a million bucks for "one night."
Indecent Proposal unfolds not so much as a story of sex and infidelity, but one
of emotional bonds that shatter more easily than either party might have
imagined. David becomes viciously jealous and Diana is forced to choose between
her marital bond and the powerful seduction of an attractive billionaire. The
material itself is promising -- the intricacies of love and lust are complex
and fascinating subjects -- but this film is only interesting in exploring
those complexities through a layer of sensuous gauze. Adrian Lyne, director of
many other melodramas with sexual undertones (and sometimes overtones) like 9
1/2 Weeks, Fatal Attraction, Lolita, and Unfaithful, directs this film as
Zalman King might direct an episode of One Life to Live. There is an
overabundance of soft-lit scenery and frequent attention is paid to Demi
Moore's physique in close-up, but the film's emotional resonance never reaches
far beyond a tearful glance and an orchestral swell of romantic music.
The acting is as honest as it can possibly be under the circumstances. Redford
lays on the suave and still hints that there is depth and wisdom beneath the
surface. Harrelson deftly exudes the pain of a man stubborn with insecurity.
Moore is playing a blank slate of a character, and as such her performance is
notably less interesting than her male counterparts, but she still finds a
resonant emotional center. These performances in a movie that played this
material quieter, without the over-the-top flash and dramatic gauze, might have
worked. In its current form, however, Indecent Proposal is just a lukewarm
melodrama that works overtime to earn the label "another erotic drama from the
director of 9 1/2 Weeks."
The new "Benjamins" set from Bed Bath & Beyond.
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Review by Jason McKiernan
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