Obsessed (2009) Movie Review
Obsessed (2009) Review
"Obsessed (2009)" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Steve ShillProducer : William Packer
Screenwiter : David Loughery
Starring : Idris Elba,Beyoncé Knowles,Ali Larter,Jerry O'Connell,Bruce McGill,Christine Lahti
One pretty much knows what to expect going into a movie titled Obsessed. And in
this case, that title delivers on every front -- a big business hotshot is
propositioned by a disturbed secretary, and she turns into a vicious femme
fatale who stalks our hero and attempts to tear down the magnificent life he
has worked hard to build. What outrageous, over-the-top tripe. And what
hysterical fun.
Here is the most fantastically overwrought, deliberately melodramatic,
white-knuckle B-movie of the year, a film so steeped in the formula of the
psycho-sexual suspense flick that it works as both a thriller and a comedy. It
is a classic howler, the kind of movie so in on the joke that it invites the
audience to scream, shout, and cackle at the screen in a celebration of the
collective joy of good trash. And Obsessed is very good trash.
Are you interested in hearing the plot? Is it necessary? All one needs to know
before walking into the theater is that the movie is a stupid, obvious,
overblown hoot. Idris Elba plays Derek Charles, a recently promoted business
executive who has just purchased a posh new home with his doting wife, Sharon
(Beyoncé Knowles), and their baby boy. Derek is the perfect rich-prick hero;
his life is soft-focus perfect. But no life is too perfect, I guess, to avoid
the eventual disturbance of the psychotic stalker who works in the office as --
you guessed it -- a temp. Lisa (Ali Larter) strikes up an immediate rapport
with Derek, and quickly begins her plot to become his one and only love...
whether he likes it or not.
This same story has been told literally hundreds of times, in movies as
recognizable as Fatal Attraction, Disclosure, and other similar films, some of
which actually didn't star Michael Douglas. Obsessed makes no attempt to shift
or alter the clichéd structure or twist the inevitable, gruesome climax. There
are no surprises other than the increasing hilarity of each successive
compromising scenario the characters find themselves in. The movie should
receive ample credit for one groundbreaking plot point: I've never seen a film
in which a woman date-rapes a man, and in all honesty I found it very
entertaining.
Of course, the femme fatale digs her claws into every aspect of Derek's
personal and professional life -- she propositions him at parties and in the
parking garage, stalks him to a lush business retreat where she pretends to be
his wife, and slips him a roofie in his cocktail. Derek doesn't say a word
about his trouble to anyone, thereby creating massive distrust when his wife
finds out -- distrust that could "end their perfect marriage." The bitch
crosses the line when Beyoncé gets mad, and the film crescendos in what I can
safely say will be 2009's best knock-down, drag-out girlfight, complete with
treacherous staircases, everyday household weaponry, and floors that easily
give out under just the right amount of pressure.
Obsessed takes itself so seriously that it couldn't possibly take itself
seriously. It is a grandly sensational, relentlessly exploitative B-movie
revival of the highest order. But watching actors like Elba and Knowles
maintain straight faces while emoting the hell out of this connect-the-dots
script is just plain entertaining. Equally entertaining is watching Larter
barely suppress grins as she digs gleefully deeper into this villainous role,
and witnessing Jerry O'Connell, as Derek's best friend and colleague, not even
attempt to disguise his laughter as he recites lines so trite they're almost
fresh. The film is mindless, guttural, emotion-driven, button-pushing juicy
fun. Engaging one's mind would be a fatal flaw; this is the kind of movie best
enjoyed under a drunken haze of soda and popcorn.
He was asking for it, dressing like that.
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Review by Jason McKiernan
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