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Stay Movie Review
Stay Review

"Stay" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Marc ForsterProducer : Tom Lassally,Eric Kopeloff
Screenwiter : David Benioff
Starring : Ewan McGregor,Ryan Gosling,Naomi Watts,Bob Hoskins,Kate Burton,Janeane Garofalo
I don’t see dead people, and, more than likely, I never will. Maybe one day,
when I die, I’ll see plenty of them but while I am of this earth, it’s a no-go.
This is not to say people don’t see spirits, ghosts, and specters; walk down
any street in Manhattan and you’re likely to see a woman telling you she can
see them and hold pretty strong conversation with them. Hollywood saw this and
also saw dollar signs. Blame M. Night Shyamalan for most of this. He made a
great movie and has spawned legions of gutter-sludge rip-offs. Once in awhile,
however, we get an arty riff on this formula. The last one was Jonathan Glazer’
s haunting Birth, and now we have Marc Forster’s hypnotic Stay.
So, this suicidal college student walks into a psychiatrist’s office… no,
seriously. Sam (Ewan McGregor) has the misfortune of substituting for a few
sessions for a colleague (Janeane Garofalo) when she gets a little loopy with
the drugs. Her first patient, and seemingly only patient, is Henry Letham (Ryan
Gosling). On only their second meeting, Henry announces that he is going to
kill himself in three days, at midnight. Sam spends the rest of his time,
divided between his ex-patient/girlfriend (Naomi Watts) and trying to figure
out why Henry wants to kill himself. And don’t forget Henry’s dead parents (Bob
Hoskins and Kate Burton) who show up in the real world. Describing past that
would be like trying to explain a Lynch film (notably Lost Highway and
Mulholland Drive), and no one should have these secrets ruined.
The premise sounds melodramatic and short on ideas, and admittedly those were
my first thoughts. But director Marc Forster, after the powerhouse Monster’s
Ball, last year’s classy Finding Neverland, and Stay, is on a roll the likes of
which we haven’t seen in a long time, turning in three startlingly different
films directed with the same deft attentiveness and nuanced understanding of
character. Unlike Wes Anderson or David Gordon Green, Forster’s style is much
more subtle and underplayed, paying more attention to shadows, reflections and
lights than pastels or jumpy narratives. He’s the real thing, a class-A
director.
Give special attention to the script, easily one of the year’s best, by David
Benioff. In a film that begs to be sappy, with dead parents and suicidal
tendencies, Benioff finds the twists and turns of the mind much more
interesting than the vocal sentiments. The dialogue is crisper than a brand-new
dollar bill, giving the actors a lot to play with. McGregor has his juiciest
role since Big Fish and plays it with expert resolve. Watch the emotional
complexity that Naomi Watts brings to the troubled girlfriend who must watch
the madness on the peripheral plain. However, it’s Gosling who steals the show,
looking charmingly uneasy, digging deep into Henry’s fractured mind. Forster
works wonders with the actors, keeping a film that is trippier than anything to
come out so far this year, strangely grounded in the humanity of the situation.
Films like this don’t allow you to anticipate what’s coming, deciding to
instead sneak into your body and astound you with the widest range of emotions.
You won’t see it coming either.
But if you don't stay, try the door.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin
I understand everything you wrote on the review of Stay,but explain the movie
to me. I couldn't understand what was real and what wasn't. Was he already
dead? I think the movie was fantastic and the actors couldn't have preformed
better.Ryan Gosling was amazing. What a talented actor. But please will someone
explain this, or is it left to us to have our own take on it. Whatever the case
I'll be talking about this one for a while.
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