The Dying Gaul Movie Review
The Dying Gaul Review

"The Dying Gaul" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Craig LucasProducer : David Newman,Campbell Scott,George VanBuskirk,Lisa Zimble
Screenwiter : Craig Lucas
Starring : Campbell Scott,Patricia Clarkson,Peter Sarsgaard,Bill Camp,Robin Bartlett,Linda Emond
In 1995, the internet was still a strange, scary destination for most
Americans, a primary meeting place for pornography hounds and other assorted
lonely creeps who sought out the thrilling anonymity of the web’s myriad chat
rooms. Based on one of his plays, Craig Lucas’ (The Secret Lives of Dentists,
Prelude to a Kiss) directorial debut The Dying Gaul is fascinated with the
dangerous allure of these online social venues, which provide users with
identity secrecy and, thus, the means to express taboo fantasies (and deal with
emotionally corrosive issues) from the comfort and safety of home. Part movie
industry critique and part Greek tragedy, Lucas’ film charts the modem-enabled
turmoil between a married Tinsletown power couple and an aspiring gay
screenwriter in the luxurious Hollywood hills, a trio whose interpersonal
dynamic is irreparably disrupted thanks to the nasty role-playing opportunities
afforded by computers. Yet with its story of rampant duplicity and showbiz
shallowness tied to a now technologically outdated mid-‘90s milieu, and with
its satire weighed down by banality, The Dying Gaul seems relevant only insofar
as its cast effectively pinpoints the vengeful malice born from spurned love
and squandered trust.
Jeffrey (Campbell Scott) is a bottom line-driven producer interested in Robert’
s (Peter Sarsgaard) script “The Dying Gaul,” a semi-autobiographical tale about
AIDS based on his relationship with his now-dead agent and partner Malcolm
(Bill Camp). However, to make the project commercially viable, Jeffrey demands
that Robert change the central couple from a homosexual to heterosexual duo.
Jettisoning his integrity, Robert sells out and does as Jeffrey asks, in the
process pocketing $1 million and establishing a close-knit friendship with
Jeffrey and his failed screenwriter wife Elaine (Patricia Clarkson), whose life
is so purposeless that learning how to control her multi-million dollar house’s
blinds constitutes an exciting afternoon. Yet the happy threesome’s
relationship is soon torn asunder when, after learning that Robert frequents
chat rooms, Elaine strikes up an in-disguise online conversation with her new
friend and learns that he’s having an affair with Jeffrey. This devastating
discovery frighteningly undercuts Elaine’s sense of security and stability
while also igniting a desire for retribution, leading to a dangerous game of
cyberspace cat-and-mouse in which Elaine poses as the back-from-the-dead spirit
of Malcolm and, ultimately, each character’s true, less-than-savory
personalities are drawn out into the blinding L.A. light of day.
Though carefully avoiding long-winded speechifying, Lucas’ writing nonetheless
never generates a truly believable set of circumstances, his characters coming
across like artificial constructs rather than real people and his scenario
appearing too schematically convenient. Centered around a particular high-tech
moment in time that’s only somewhat pertinent to today’s hard-wired world, The
Dying Gaul feels like what it is – a stodgy adaptation of a decade-old play –
an impression that’s further confirmed by the director’s theatrical enactment
of Elaine/Malcolm and Robert’s chat room discussions, their close-up faces
juxtaposed against black-and-white backgrounds like ominous ancient busts on an
empty stage. Despite Lucas’ occasionally clunky plotting and visual aesthetic,
however, his film manages to keep its head above water largely thanks to its
three superb central performances, with Scott bringing a greedy arrogance to
Jeffrey and Clarkson delicately conveying Elaine’s confused hurt and fury. As
Robert, Sarsgaard frequently finds it difficult to infuse humanity into a
character who essentially functions as a dramatic device. Yet in a scene of
orgasmic release that one wishes were more emblematic of Lucas’ subdued drama,
the versatile actor locates the lacerating mixture of ecstasy and shame born
from romantic betrayal.
Rage against the dying of the light, and the Gaul.
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Review by Nicholas Schager
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