In the Cut Movie Review
In the Cut Review

"In the Cut" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Jane CampionProducer : Effie Brown
Screenwiter : Jane Campion,Susanna Moore
Starring : Meg Ryan,Mark Ruffalo,Jennifer Jason Leigh,Kevin Bacon,Nick Damici
Congratulations to In the Cut, currently the worst film of 2003. Mandy Moore
and the producers responsible for the equally atrocious How to Deal, can
breathe a sigh of relief, for they used to stand atop the trash heap but no
longer bear the burden. People, I sit through these films so you don’t have to.
Spare yourself and avoid Cut.
What, now you want to know why it’s so bad? Where to begin? A heaping slop of
half-thoughts, Cut exists so squeaky-clean Meg Ryan, trapped in a career
spiral, can play against type with meager results. It begins with women turning
up dead in a grimy lower Manhattan neighborhood. Assorted clues point Detective
James Malloy (Mark Ruffalo) to the door of disheveled English professor Frannie
Avery (Ryan), who happened to be in a local bar the night a fellow patron
turned up dead.
Slowly, the movie becomes less interested in solving the grisly crimes and more
involved in figuring out Frannie, who flirts with an African-American student,
panders to her bloated and dysfunctional half-sister (Jennifer Jason Leigh),
and initiates a rough-and-tumble but soulless affair with Malloy. Working the
case takes a back seat in the detective’s mind to scoring some tail from this
literate neighborhood tramp.
Clumsily directed by Jane Campion, the schizophrenic Cut comes and goes as if
in a dream state, then changes gears on a dime. Elements of the murder mystery
clash with the central passion play, and both are repeatedly disrupted by
bizarre supporting characters – from Kevin Bacon’s deranged ex-boyfriend to
Malloy’s guitar-strumming partner – who exist solely to convince us that they
may or may not be the killer.
Cut believes it deserves credit for dabbling in tawdry sex, serial killers, and
insincere dramatic tensions. Too bad Campion mistakes “crass” for “racy” when
choosing her material. Ryan wants to turn heads by sullying her sweetheart
image, but Frannie’s such a shallow combination of emotional idiosyncrasies
there’s no reason to invest in her existence. Her relationship with Malloy aims
for dangerous, but instead feels dumb and dull.
Working from Susanna Moore’s novel, Campion falls back on a pedestrian murder
mystery whenever Ryan and Ruffalo cool off. Unfortunately, the case is so
anorexic it threatens to tumble over like a house of cards if only Ryan’s
character could pull herself from between the sheets long enough to reveal one
very important piece of information to Ruffalo’s clueless detective.
What we’re left with is a pasted-together beast that can’t maintain flow for
five whole minutes. A distracted piece of filmmaking, this disjointed bomb
rolls along like a square tire. The inept screenplay swirls and tumbles like a
tissue in a hurricane, rapidly peaking, instantly plummeting, but always
heading in no direction whatsoever. It’s so arrogant, pompous, and all over the
place that everyone involved should be put on some form of Hollywood probation.
Why bother with the motel?
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





