Laurel Canyon Movie Review
Laurel Canyon Review

"Laurel Canyon" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Lisa CholodenkoProducer : Susan A. Stover,Jeffrey Levy-Hinte,Scott Ferguson
Screenwiter : Lisa Cholodenko
Starring : Frances McDormand,Kate Beckinsale,Natascha McElhone,Christian Bale,Alessandro Nivola
What a shock: There's licentious sex going on up here in the Hollywood Hills.
I say "up here" because Laurel Canyon, Sunset Blvd., etc. is my 'hood. So, to
those who might take the events of this movie as a generalized portrayal of the
area, let me assure you that it's strictly on a lot by lot basis. These hills
are crawling with people from the movie and music industries, some of whom
might actually resemble the characters of Laurel Canyon. Double shock.
This intimate drama (by director Lisa Cholodenko) deals with the effect a
liberal living standard might have on a young, impressionable, Harvard graduate
with a conservative nature and great looks. She's Alex (Kate Beckinsale), the
fiancé of Sam Bentley (Christian Bale), who needs to come to Los Angeles to
complete his residency at the renowned Hausman Neuropsychiatric Institute. The
move to a quiet hillside home will enable Alex to complete her dissertation on
Drosophila Genomics, the world of chromosomes and centimorgans applied to the
reproductive aspects of the fruit fly. No dummy, this lady.
The plan is to stay at Sam's mother's place on Hollywood Way, off Laurel Canyon
Blvd. while she, Jane Bentley (Frances McDormand), a successful record producer
with a hippie lifestyle, is at her Malibu pad. But plans have a way of going
awry in this household. Jane has given the Malibu house to her ex-lover and has
remained in the Hollywood home, a property with swimming pool and recording
studio, working to complete her new boyfriend's album.
Disappointed in his mother's laissez faire, unapologetic attitude, Sam tasks
Alex with finding a rental house while he spends his workdays in residence at
the medical institute, where he meets the attractive co-resident Sara (Natascha
McElhone). While this leads to certain temptations for Sam, they're nothing
compared to where Alex is going.
Without Sam around, Alex becomes so fascinated by pleasure seeking Jane and Ian
McNight, her sexually opportunistic younger boyfriend and the lead singer of
the group, that she abandons her studies, feints her efforts to find alternate
lodgings, and embarks on a course of behavior that leads to a menage à trois
and a rather total betrayal of her unsuspecting fiancé.
The questionable character behavior and the avoidance of consequence (with a
copout ending) for what would and should be life-changing,
relationship-adjusting acts, are story weaknesses -- the acts depict
exceedingly reckless choices for such smart people. First of all for Alex, who
takes a direction that seems not likely to be part of her character
possibilities, dramatic though it may be. The dissolution of her moral values
is the core of the drama, raising the ante for its persuasiveness. Secondly
for Jane, who, for all her freewheeling ways, is a complex and vulnerable
person with considerable intelligence and control. Before she would engage in
forbidden sexual fruit, she might be expected to balance it against the
betrayal of her own son, for whom she avows her constant motherly love. Would
she so readily abandon that for a little instant gratification?
Despite the insistent prurience in the writing, the performances are pro and
much production value is accomplished on a modest budget. We've never before
seen McDormand as a self-indulgent woman of tight jeans and bleached hair -- a
gal so far away from her "sheriff" in Fargo or her "mother" in Almost Famous
that you're reminded of what acting skill is all about. Pert Londoner
Beckinsale shows some departure from the safety of primmer roles, such as her
Nurse Lt. Evelyn Johnson in Pearl Harbor, though she does her three sex scenes
here with a fastidious lack of nudity. Bale plays Sam with convincing
emotional injury while struggling against temptation, providing the sympathetic
rock we cling to, and leaving us with a desire to see more of this actor's
capable naturalness.
Cholodenko, with credits for directing episodes of Six Feet Under and Homicide:
Life on the Street, TV series, previously wrote and directed High Art in 1998.
Her arousal of emotional fireworks when disparate lifestyles and values clash,
with the attempt to draw in the vulnerability under everyone's skin to balance
the battle, portend creative product ahead that will be worth watching for.
Since this town provides star sightings as regularly as Lotto winners, I'm
going to be especially vigilant for Natascha McElhone driving down Laurel, as
she does in the film. What an image to contemplate. And, please, you folks
who don't live here, don't take this steamy romp for a representation of
Hollywood life. You hardly even see any hippies around here anymore.
Rock on, Frances.
|
Review by Jules Brenner
|






