The Deep End Movie Review
The Deep End Review

"The Deep End" Overview

Rating: NR
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Scott McGehee,David SiegelProducer : Scott McGehee,David Siegel
Screenwiter : Scott McGehee,David Siegel
Starring : Tilda Swinton,Goran Visnjic,Jonathan Tucker,Peter Donat,Josh Lucas,Raymond J. Barry,Tamara Hope,Jordon Dorrance
Welcome to beautiful Lake Tahoe, where a boy can still get his mom to cover up
a murder and be home in time for supper.
A heavy drama, The Deep End is just such a tale. When teenaged Beau (Jonathan
Tucker) gets mixed up with a seedy, older man (he's secretly gay), their
relationship gets a bit too intense and the lech ends up dead. Imagine her
surprise when mom Margaret (Tilda Swinton) stumbles upon a corpse on her
idyllic beach! Of course, she does what any mother of an aspiring musical
virtuoso would do -- sinks the body in the lake, hides the guy's car, and
pretends nothing has happened.
Before long, the body is discovered, and the film takes a turn toward a
blackmail plot, courtesy of ER nice guy Goran Visnjic. Ultimately this is a
film about desperate measures -- a test of how far maternal instinct can take a
person. Too bad the execution of that concept isn't as assured.
It's a movie you never saw (and you were lucky), but Before and After went down
this road (unmemorably, I should add) a few years ago, only there it was the
father willing to cover up the crime. That was a movie with Meryl Streep and
Liam Neeson, and even they couldn't pull this plot off, getting oh-so-serious
with the moral dilemma and forgetting that there were people looking to the
screen for entertainment.
The Deep End learns nothing from that lesson. Moving slowly and deliberately,
the film finally comes to a boil after about 90 minutes, but I fear much of the
audience will be lost by then. Instead of trying to surprise or dazzle us, the
film plays coy, throwing one perplexing plot twist after another such that we
are left with surprisingly little explanation for anything we've seen along the
way.
It's all vaguely unsatisfying because it's just never believable. For
starters, we don't believe that Margaret or her son would never be caught -- or
even suspected -- for the crime. And when Margaret finally and tearfully tells
us what really happened that night, we don't believe it then, either. The
truth, as she tells it, doesn't even seem possible. Combined with the worst
fake-trumpet-playing footage put to film, the whole affair just comes off as
phony, a gimmick that might have worked on serialized radio in the 1930s but
not on the big screen today (oddly enough, the film is based on an old
serialized novel called The Blank Wall).
Fortunately, The Deep End is a lovely film to look at, well photographed and
populated with universally interesting, nuanced, and surprisingly rich
characters. (Directors Scott McGehee and David Siegel's last film was Suture,
way back in 1993.) That only takes you so far, of course; it's also worth
noting that the sound design and film editing are amateurishly bad.
As its centerpiece, Swinton owns the film as she so often does, her very spare
facial features a mask upon which every emotion under the sun is projected.
Would that those emotions made a little more sense in the context of the plot.
Don't get up for us.
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Review by Christopher Null
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