Lakeview Terrace Movie Review
Lakeview Terrace Review

"Lakeview Terrace" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Neil LaButeProducer : James Lassiter,Will Smith
Screenwiter : David Loughery,Howard Korder
Starring : Samuel L. Jackson,Patrick Wilson,Kerry Washington,Jay Hernandez,Regine Nehy,Jaishon Fisher,Clarence Darlington
Lakeview Terrace is the seventh film directed by playwright Neil LaBute and it
is, by a wide margin, the director's weakest effort to date. A domestic
thriller built on brittle tension, the film brandishes racial conflict and
flailing machismo before revealing that it has little insight into either
topic. Depending on who you talk to, these facts are burdened or lightened by
the appearance of the ever-ostentatious Samuel L Jackson.
Set in an affluent corner of a Los Angeles suburb, Jackson enters the screen
quietly as Abel Turner, a veteran member of the LAPD. On any given day Abel is
either the best parent and neighbor you've ever met, or a lumbering, blue
nightmare. The latter opinion is that of Chris and Lisa Mattson (Patrick Wilson
and Kerry Washington), a young, interracial couple from Chicago who have just
bought the house next to Turner's. She designs clothing while he works for an
all-natural supermarket chain named Good. Abel isn't fond of seeing a pretty
black woman with a white boy, but his bigger problems are with domestic decorum.
Chris indulges in rap music, flicking cigarette butts and making time with his
wife in their pool, in plain sight of Abel's teenage children (Regine Nehy and
Jaishon Fisher). Seeing his daughter practicing her booty-shaking in front of
Lisa is even worse. These mild neighborhood improprieties are elevated and,
eventually, lead to severe bouts of violence. The situation becomes grimmer
when Lisa announces a pending child and Abel is put on suspension for teaching
a random young man a lesson in paternal responsibility at gunpoint.
Lakeview Terrace wants so badly to be about everything that it can't settle on
pronouncing a single idea coherently. It's a playful concept at first but
screenwriters David Loughery and Howard Korder are much too busy trying to be
serious to see the satire they might have constructed. Almost every exchange
plays towards something controversial, but these thematic teases never lead
anywhere. The ever-present indecision levels any intrigue the film might have
produced and it makes LaBute's love for blunt, awkward exchanges, typified here
by a row between Abel and some of the Mattson's Blue State friends, seem jagged
and unearned.
LaBute unconvincingly tries to explain away Abel through almost every possible
reasoning. At one point he's in love with Lisa, at another he's a scorned
widower whose wife was fooling around with her white boss, and at another point
he's just a bitchy cop hiding behind the Blue Wall. Plenty of good films have
been made about the bad things cops get away with because they're cops, but
they have all shared a focus on the topic. By the third quarter of the film,
things have fallen into such a state of disarray that the audience could be
accused of rubbernecking.
Samuel L. Jackson is a born scene-stealer. He's so adept at it, in fact, that
he even chews up scenes that have nothing to left to eat in them. He shouts,
squints his eyes, and then calms his voice to a low, calculated threat. His
ferocity has nowhere to go in Lakeview Terrace, constantly finding the actor at
odds with a film too arbitrary to even care about. Even as able co-stars
Washington and Wilson match his intensity, there's a feeling that the actor is
overcompensating. Jackson stands like a tornado in a desert: feral, aimless,
and very lonely.
And I had to walk uphill both ways, in the snow!
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Review by Chris Cabin
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