Splendor Movie Review
Splendor Review
"Splendor" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Gregg ArakiProducer : Gregg Araki,Graham Broadbent,Damian Jones
Screenwiter : Gregg Araki
Starring : Kathleen Robertson,Johnathon Schaech,Matthew Keeslar,Kelly Macdonald,Eric Mabius,Dan Gatto,Linda Kim
Generation X will leave behind an inimitable legacy. Splendor, with all its
profound idiosyncrasies, will someday be considered proof.
Twenty years from now people will look back and say, "Man, everyone was so
weird in the nineties!" and frankly after seeing this movie, I'll agree.
Writer/Director Gregg Araki (The Doom Generation, The Living Dead) successfully
weaves together an unfathomable yet genuine love story with screwball humor
characteristic of 1930s comedies. Splendor is the story of Veronica (Kathleen
Robertson - Nowhere, I Woke Up Early the Day I Died) and her two lovers Abel
(Johnathan Schaech - That Thing You Do!) and Zed (Matt Keeslar - The Last Days
of Disco). All three are in their early twenties struggling to get by
somewhere in L.A. Zed is a drummer in a death metal band and Abel is freelance
rock critic. The two are complete opposites with nothing in common except that
they both are madly in love with Veronica, who, is somehow equally in love with
both of them. Veronica, feeling obligated, tells Zed and Abel that she is
seeing two guys at once. However, neither is willing to give her up and after
trial and tribulation the strange trio ends up defying all the odds, and move
in together!
I'll stop there because to give away any more of the plot would do its
creativity an injustice. I'll just tell you that it's like none other I've
ever seen.
Splendor is provocative from the opening scene, but it has its share of flaws.
Foremost is the pace of the film; an exciting climax and a compelling intro
bookend lengthy sequences of dull plot. A few one-liners make these gaps
bearable, but they simply could have been shorter and better. Another weakness
is a future Veronica serving as narrator, reflecting on her story. To me, the
plot spoke for itself; it really didn't need any narration, which often made
for unpleasant transitions between scenes.
I get the feeling that this movie will have completely dichotomous responses
from varying audiences. The twenty-something Friends-watching, Swingers-loving
crowd should enjoy it, while slightly older audiences (and critics) might not
appreciate it as much. Still, though, if just for originality, it should be
worth it.
Reviewer: Athan Bezaitis





