Turn the River Movie Review
Turn the River Review
"Turn the River" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Chris EigemanProducer : Ami Armstrong
Screenwiter : Chris Eigeman
Starring : Famke Janssen,Jaymie Dornan,Rip Torn,Matt Ross,Lois Smith,Marin Hinkle,Terry Kinney,John Juback
A jumpy forger asks an attractive pool hustler acquaintance, "What are you doing
in town?" Without missing a beat, she replies, "Trying to get out." It's an apt summary
of the entire plot of Turn the River, a stark, barebones genre piece redolent of rosin,
racks, and eight balls, where the winning of a hustle bet of $50,000 doesn't signify
triumph but escape.
Chris Eigeman makes an impressive debut as writer/director of Turn the River, ably abetted
by an intense, edgy star turn from Famke Janssen as a pool hustler who wants to grab
her abused son away from his weak, alcoholic father and get the hell out of town
fast.
Eigeman's grainy and rank 16mm-to-HD infusion captures the scant, fetid tone of broken
down pool halls and cracked glass bars infested with third-rate hustlers and frat
boys slumming for a hustle. Not as mannered as Scorsese's The Color of Money but more
reflecting the squalor of Rossen's The Hustler, Eigeman composes and cuts his shots communicating
the anxious desperation of the denizens of these lower depths, picking up men in
cheap suits as the hustlers break for a win or a loss -- the style reflecting their
souls.
With Eigeman setting the mood, it is at first disconcerting to see Janssen stroll
in, looking like a television star trying to look desperate and fit in to the milieu.
But it doesn't take long before that idea is dumped. Janssen's Kailey Sullivan is
a determined woman, her every movement a single-minded trajectory to rescue her son,
Gulley (Jaymie Dornan), from the clutches of remarried, abusive David (Matt Ross)
and his dominating, religious crackpot mother Abigail (Lois Smith in full, regal
intimidation mode). Janssen is wired and blinded, seeing her ultimate goal to win hustle money
fast to pay for fake passports that will take her and Gulley across the Canadian
border and away from the generically-named The City. She has no time off for camaraderie
and love, just pool. In the pool hall scenes, Kailey is psychotically purposeful in
winning the games for the bucks -- there's no lingering love for the aesthetics of
pool here. But Kailey softens up in her surreptitious early morning meetings with
Gulley, bending to her knees to greet her son, her eyes conveying the emotional undercurrents
in this hardened woman.
In these quiet moments, Eigeman relaxes his grip. The conversations between mother
and son betray emotional warmth that softens the edges of the murky poolroom scenes.
Eigeman also conveys child abuse in a non-exploitative, non-Hollywood way. No dark
shadows falling over children, no big-moment confrontations, just a passing glance at
Gulley's broken wrist or the scratches on his face -- simply a normal day for Gulley.
We also get a hotwire supporting cast for backup. The old school Chicago Steppenwolf
theater contingent is here in force, including the aforementioned Smith along with
Terry Kinney as the feral forger with a soft spot for Kailey. Rip Torn lumbers and
roars through his role as grumpy Alan, Kailey's mentor, as only Rip Torn can. (When Kailey
interrupts Torn during an early morning tryst, he grumbles, "You're making my retirement
difficult in many, many ways.")
The only false note in the film is an unnecessary exposition scene of Kailey tearfully
explaining to Alan how she got to this point. Janssen tries hard but the scene still
remains hackneyed. Then again, after she explains her back story, Kailey proceeds
to the back room of the pool hall, collapsing on top of a pool table. The image of
Kailey asleep on the green felt, restoring herself for the next game, encapsulates
the emotional obsession and force of the film in a single, unvarnished image.
3-ball in the side pocket.
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Review by Paul Brenner
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