Stranger Than Fiction Movie Review
Stranger Than Fiction Review
"Stranger Than Fiction" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Eric BrossProducer : Ram Bergman,Dana Lustig
Screenwiter : Tim Garrick,Scott Russell
Starring : Todd Field,Natasha Wagner,MacKenzie Astin,Dina Meyer
I am beginning to detect a very strange associate with the surreal and the sub
par. This is not to say that I have repented and become a born-again fanatic
of American cheese-factory films and will worship John Hughes until my knees
bleed. Instead, it is only to say that the last several films that I have
watched that have had the intent of being surreal have ended up being sub par.
For example, take The Sixth Sense, Naked Lunch, The Blair Witch Project and
numerous other oddities that escape me at the moment, each film supposedly
working off of the weird but instead going into the realm of the noddy viewer
(or, in the case of The Blair Witch Project, the physical embodiment of a Pepto
Bismol commercial).
The latest in this string of disappointments comes in the form of Stranger Than
Fiction, a film which has countless plot twists that are not only predictable
but come with predictable regularity. All one must keep in mind to crack this
film open like the WWII Enigma cipher is that Stranger Than Fiction works off
of the idea that Stranger Than Fiction does not bare any resemblance to actual
life (aside from being a perfect demonstration of Murphy's Law) but instead
goes more along the lines of every single B-movie mystery you have ever
watched. With that implanted in your head, you will not have to sit through
the boring second half of the movie which the narrator spends explaining what
goes on.
Basically, Stranger Than Fiction follows Donovan, a writer, as he tells the
story of four Salt Lake City twentysomethings -- who are both good Mormons and
damn near alcoholics -- who happen to be caught in the situation where they
have to cover up one murder. This of course leads to cover up more than one
murder, as recent films such as Very Bad Things and Stag have taught us.
The first half of the film is marked with a morbid and wonderfully scripted
deadpan humor which is able to sustain a viewers interest until it reaches the
second half, where the humor stops about as quick as a New York cab with
hyperactive brakes. By this time, the film has conned you into a slight
interest in the characters and given you an expectation of more sardonic wit by
and by. By the time you have reached the end of the film, it is too late and
the remaining forty-five minutes have been wasted.
The director does a fairly good job of using some interesting photographic
effects to grab your interest in the opening credits and then does what any
director with a good cast will do: let's them work. The writers do a great job
with dialogue but still cannot do much with plot originality.
The cast is mostly comprised of independent or art film people who turn a
highly decent trick as far as this movie is concerned, which almost makes up
for in performances what it lacks in originality. On the bill is Dina Meyer,
who I insulted incredibly for her job in Bats but who shows none of the same
tendencies here. Also present is Eyes Wide Shut's Todd Field, Lost Highway's
Natasha Wagner, and The Last Days of Disco's MacKenzie Astin. All of them do
their jobs to levels which are severely out of sync with such a poorly
structured film.
Stranger Than Fiction is a definite sub par. However, unlike Naked Lunch,
another surreal film, it is not so far gone down the sub par as to be
unredeemable. If the writers had put as much effort into the first half as the
second half, it would have been a great movie. But, as the seemed to have gone
on strike halfway through, we are left with something a little below the
halfway mark.
Reviewer: James Brundage



