Nine Lives Movie Review
Nine Lives Review

"Nine Lives" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Rodrigo GarciaProducer : Julie Lynn,Alejandro González Iñarritu
Screenwiter : Rodrigo Garcia
Starring : Kathy Baker,Amy Brenneman,Elpidia Carrillo,Glenn Close,Stephen Dillane,Dakota Fanning,William Fichtner,Lisa Gay Hamilton,Holly Hunter,Jason Isaacs,Joe Mantegna,Ian McShane,Molly Parker,Mary Kay Place,Sydney Tamiia Poitier,Aidan Quinn,Miguel Sandoval,Amanda Seyfried,Sissy Spacek,Robin Wright Penn
A well-cast compilation film suffocating on its own self-importance, Nine Lives
aims to tie together nine vastly different stories, but ends up telling hardly
any of them well. The conceit of writer/director Rodrigo Garcia is to take nine
vignettes, each centered around a different woman (usually in desperate
circumstances), and give us a brief glimpse into her life before cutting away
to the next one, while stringing a few connecting threads between them all. To
ensure that he’s not playing favorites, each piece is done in one single
Steadicam shot and kept to only nine or ten minutes in length. A minor
character from one vignette becomes a major player later on, or vice versa. As
in literature, anthology works like this are a hit-and-miss affair, and in this
case the misses far outnumber the ones that connect.
Nine Lives opens strong on Sandra (Elpidia Carrillo), an imprisoned mother.
Mopping up a floor, she’s threatened by fellow prisoners, and harassed by a
guard (Miguel Sandoval) who’s convinced she can give him information. Everyone
tells Sandra she’s not going to make it, but you think she just might be able
to, hunkering down turtle-like and just plowing through the rest of her
sentence. But then her daughter visits, and the phone doesn’t work, sending
Sandra into a stunning explosion of rage, like a mother bear kept from her cub.
It’s a short, unrelentingly powerful story, and done by itself it would stand
as a sublime little tragedy. The same goes for the final piece, in which Glenn
Close and Dakota Fanning (hardly a better match could be imagined) visit a
cemetery and talk with sublime ease about not much at all. But then comes the
rest of the film in between.
In short order we’re given Robin Penn Wright as another mother, this one
expecting, who runs into an old lover at a supermarket, Amy Brenneman playing a
carefree woman at the funeral of the wife of her ex-husband, Holly Hunter
getting upset with her boyfriend for telling too-personal stories to their
uncomfortable guests, and so on. Even when the writing moves beyond bourgeois
pathos – as is the case with a painfully overacted story where a manic Lisa Gay
Hamilton confronts her father for some traumatizing transgression from the past
– Garcia is rarely able to get inside his character’s heads in the span of time
he’s allowed them, and the ways in which he’ll shoehorn an actor from one piece
into another never adds anything and seems to be just showing off.
Little here is the actors’ fault, as Garcia has finagled himself (for the most
part) an astoundingly talented cast who acquit themselves well, especially the
previously mentioned Carrillo, and Deadwood’s Ian McShane, playing a
wheelchair-bound father hiding his infirmity behind a wall of black humor. But
by the time viewers have reached the fourth or fifth story, however,
restlessness is likely to set in, as it becomes clear this is a film hurtling
slowly towards nothing, with little to keep one interested along the way.
Live through this.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





