In the Bedroom Movie Review
In the Bedroom Review

"In the Bedroom" Overview

Rating: R
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Todd FieldProducer : Graham Leader,Ross Katz,Todd Field
Screenwiter : Robert Festinger,Todd Field
Starring : Tom Wilkinson,Sissy Spacek,Nick Stahl,Marisa Tomei,William Mapother,Deborah Derecktor
In the Bedroom is an immensely powerful motion picture that presents a small
New England town in its trademark tranquility... until tragedy strikes and
disrupts the folksy setting. Actor-turned-director Todd Field delivers a
penetrating feature (in his mainstream debut) that suggests he has a knack for
helming solid, gripping heartfelt stories that are shocking and uniquely
absorbing. In the Bedroom is an eloquent and sobering drama that intensifies
beyond expectation. Ambitious and convincingly involving, this film is one of
the most memorable offerings of the year. Well-acted and beautifully crafted,
In the Bedroom is an emotionally haunting tale that provokes the senses.
The film takes place in a small Maine community called Camden. Here, it’s not
all that uncommon to see chipped wooden houses on every other corner or
sleepy-eyed churches that feature old rusty bells hanging in the steeple. The
aura of small-town life is apparent and could pass for a Norman Rockwell
painting. Among this quaint town’s residents are a prototypical middle-aged
couple named Matt and Ruth Fowler (Tom Wilkinson and Sissy Spacek). Matt is a
distinguished physician and native Mainer. New Yorker Ruth is a high school
choral music teacher who enjoys her occupation. The Fowlers have one child
named Frank (Nick Stahl), a college graduate student studying architecture, who
has returned home for the summer while working as a lobsterman to earn some
extra money.
But Frank is tempted to stick around, blowing off his privileged Ivy League
education, mainly due to his love affair with an older woman, thirtysomething
Natalie Strout (Marisa Tomei). Frank’s parents aren’t too thrilled about his
involvement with Natalie, particularly since her working-class roots are
somewhat uncouth for their taste. Besides, things are rather complicated with
Natalie’s estranged ex-husband Richard (William Mapother). With all the
turmoil, Field’s protagonists rumble toward tragic circumstances that will
shake their existences.
The performances are astounding and the players click with a noteworthy
potency. Both Wilkinson and Spacek are engrossing as a mature couple going
through the motions of a distant, straining marriage. Wilkinson’s Matt is a
man saturated with inner conflict while he nonchalantly tries to defeat the
demons inside. Spacek’s Ruth is a complex tortured soul whose inner turmoil
fascinates as we watch it methodically unravel in a quiet explosion. As the
soul-searching rogue Frank, Stahl brings some much-needed vibrancy to a role
that could have easily been dismissed as inconsequential. And Tomei is also
effective as the bouncy, married New England sassy-talking gal who is both
desirable and directionless. She is radiant as the forbidden fruit that Frank
finds so captivating and inescapable.
In the Bedroom is based on the short story “Killings” by Andre Dubus. The
script (by Field and co-writer Robert Festinger) has an unassuming, hypnotic
momentum that carries the storyline along in impeccable fashion. The
characters are as intriguingly handled as the unspeakable criminal act that
takes place in the movie. Field knows how to incorporate the smallest details
that invoke the seeds of a tragedy. The pacing is slow at times, but it makes
for an enticing and deceptive drama. Field's narrative is refreshingly
unpredictable and shocking, intense and cryptic. It's one of the most
impressive and intoxicating independent films to arrive on the big screen in a
long time.
Oddity: No extras on the DVD aside from foreign language tracks and subtitles.
Strange!
In the kitchen.
Reviewer: Frank Ochieng





