Random Hearts Movie Review
Random Hearts Review

"Random Hearts" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Sydney PollackProducer : Sydney Pollack,Marykay Powell
Screenwiter : Kurt Luedtke
Starring : Harrison Ford,Kristin Scott Thomas,Charles Dutton,Bonnie Hunt,Dennis Haysbert,Sydney Pollack,Richard Jenkins,Paul Guilfoyle,Susanna Thompson,Peter Coyote,Dylan Baker,Lynne Thigpen,Kate Mara,Ariana Thomas
What does Hollywood have against us? Year in and year out, we fork over
millions and millions of dollars to see movies that are consistently bad.
Sure, a few of them are good and more than a few of them are enjoyable, but
most of the movies are bad. Yet we still pay. And still they proceed to
torture us with movies like Random Hearts.
Torture is the correct term for such a movie, one that spends two hours and
twenty minutes evoking boredom, yawns, and snores from the audience. There is
no kinder way to put it. However, I could be completely honest and say that
this is perhaps the worst two and a half hours I have spent in a movie theatre
all year… and I've seen a lot of really bad movies.
Random Hearts is the long, drawn out, unbearably slow story of Dutch Van Der
Brock (Ford) and Kay Chandler (Thomas), an IAD Sergeant and a congresswoman.
Both of their spouses are cheating on them when the adulterer's plane crashes
in the Chesapeake Bay. This is twenty minutes into the movie. The next two
hours are spent in the midst of a frizzled romance between the two.
Besides this, several subplots including Kay Chandler's running against a
religious fanatic and Dutch's attempts to secure charges on a corrupt cop waste
time during this film.
I try to be nice. I try to say a few good words about every movie, if only in
the spirit of optimism. But Random Hearts does not lend itself to this
chivalry. Instead, Random Hearts bores the audience. Here are some examples
of how:
The entire movie is dialogue-based and the dialogue is terrible. The style
lends itself towards a slow pace (slow conversation, slow plot, slow pans, slow
transitions). Harrison Ford proves that he has lost whatever acting talent he
ever had, and Kristin Scott Thomas has made a major fall from grace since her
1996 Oscar Nomination for The English Patient.
The flaw in this movie lies in so many places. In the acting it would be in
providing a British actress with an American role. Kristin Scott Thomas
handles the part so badly that she cannot even lose the accent, let alone adopt
the body language of an American. She seems too reserved, too proper. Add to
this Charles Dutton (normally an interesting character actor) in a bit part
that just annoys, and you have what amounts to a terrible ensemble cast.
I cannot say something kind about this movie. There is nothing kind to say.
What I can do is simply be nice enough to it to not go on… because I could sit
here insulting this film for hours.
Thomas eulogizes her dead film.
Reviewer: James Brundage





