The Caller Movie Review
The Caller Review
"The Caller" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Richard LedesProducer : Linda Moran,Rene Bastian
Screenwiter : Richard Ledes
Starring : Frank Langella,Elliot Gould,Laura Harring,Anabel Sosa
Richard Ledes's cool and haunted neo-noir The Caller at least for half its
running time goes down like a smoky Old Fashioned. But as the film winds down,
the cocktail turns out to have been mixed with a vat of cheap bourbon.
Frank Langella, in all his icy glory, plays Jimmy Stevens, a meticulous and
cultured executive from a nefarious international energy conglomerate called
the EN Corporation. The EN Corporation has committed atrocities in South
America that Jimmy could not abide, and he has blown the whistle on their
corporate evils. But since the corporation has its agents everywhere, Jimmy
knows he is doomed and, with a slump of his shoulders and deep sigh, he awaits
his impending assassination (in Red Bank, New Jersey no less).
Aside from sitting around on benches on Central Park and reading Art of Memory
as he awaits his fate, Jimmy also hires a rumpled, retired, bird-watching
detective, Frank Turlotte (Elliot Gould) to track his movements during his
final weeks. Frank, not saying much for his detective work, doesn't realize
that Jimmy, utilizing a telephone voice distorter, is the same guy that Frank
is following.
Ledes captures New York City in stylish widescreen compositions, even if most
of the buildings in town are photographed held up by support scaffolding, as if
the vertical city is ready to fall down upon the characters. Ledes channels
Vertigo, Rear Window, Chinatown, and Blow-Up to move the film forward, but an
intrusive flashback to World War II France overtakes the noir aspects of the
film, redirecting the film back to a troublesome character study.
Langella and Gould play their roles as if through an ooze of portent, and their
interactions resemble acting exercises whispered in Torquemada's waiting room.
Langella is all brooding and doom as he awaits his destiny and only perks up
when he visits his dying mother. Unbelievable flashbacks to Jimmy's traumatic
childhood in France during World War II with another boy muddy the waters even
further. (It's doubly confusing since it is difficult to tell which of the
actors in the flashback is supposed to be Jimmy, since neither of the young
actors bears even a passing resemblance to Langella; Ledes should have checked
out The Twelve Chairs or The Wrath of God to at least get a bead on what
Langella might have looked like as a youth.)
Still, it is great to see Gould back again in a detective mode and his waddling
around his cramped apartment while checking out birds implies what may have
happened to Phillip Marlowe if aged into dotage.
There is another detective in the film: Anabel Sosa, a little girl who mines
Jimmy's past for the film's superfluous backstory. Sosa is quite a find and
there is a nice little scene of her sitting with her doll, calmly trying to get
to doll to sit up, that is a breather from Ledes's hermetic control of the
film. Also on hand is Laura Harring of Mulholland Drive fame, as a nightclub
chanteuse who, like Dorothy Lamour in Road to Hong Kong, has nothing to do with
anything and just appears as a sultry smoke-and-mirrors cleavage display
three-quarters of the way through the proceedings.
Aside from featuring Gould's best role in decades, The Caller is just a murky,
pretentious muddle.
Which is it, Czech or Slovakia?
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Review by Paul Brenner
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