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There is nothing wrong with Brokedown Palace that
a tighter screenplay couldn't have fixed. The photography is first-rate, Claire Danes (Little
Women, My So-Called Life) is excellent and the rest of the actors are more than
adequate. The story concept is solid: two innocent midwestern girls become victims of an
evil drug smuggler in exotic and far-away Thailand. If this film had been done without
stars and far away from Hollywood it might have taken us someplace worth traveling to see.
But the lamentable and oh-so-predictable ending to Brokedown Palace removes all
doubts about Danes's character Alice, and in so doing we are left with little more than a
pretty movie that feels like it was made for network television.
Mainstream movies are hell-bent to make you empathize. So the first
half hour of this film finds blonde Alice and brunette Darlene (Kate Beckinsale - Cold
Comfort Farm, The Last Days of Disco) cutting up like normal spoiled, disrespectful,
teen aged Ugly Americans. The screenwriter (David Arata) must believe that when Darlene
and Alice guffaw while pretending to pray to the Golden Buddha, we will find their snotty
naivete appealing.
Time for conflict: enter the drug dealer Nick Parks (Daniel Lapaine)
and cut to the girls being tossed into a Thai prison. They have clearly been set up by
baddies, represented by the entire Thai penal system with the complicity of a smarmy
American embassy official (Lou Diamond Phillips). Now make way for a possible savior:
Yankee Hank (Bill Pullman), the American lawyer married to the Thai lawyer...oops!
This is a gal picture, so first make Yankee Hank rather unprincipled himself, interested
only in his retainer. Now...pump up his wife (Jacqueline Kim) and give her enough
integrity for everyone! She'll save the day or her name isn't Mrs. Yankee Hank.
Danes has a very appealing ambivalence about her, unlike co-star
Beckinsale, whose hair is never mussed after months in a Thai hell-hole. It is Danes's
conflicted personality and past that keep us wondering where the plot might turn. We
needn't have worried. At the end Danes and the writers play it like a Middle School
morality play. Cliches are knocked back like punch and cookies and the curtain comes
down.
To the film's credit, there is one major cliche they avoided. How the
producers must have fought for frontal nudity during the mandatory prison shower scene!
But no dice. Danes and Beckinsale keep their clothes on all the way through. There goes
the American Pie audience.
For all of Fox's money, they must have run out of duct tape before they
could fix all the gaping holes in the script. For one, what is the point of the evil Thai
fellow-prisoner who flits in and out of scenes like a partially malfunctioning light bulb?
What ever happened to Nick Parks at the end? And will somebody please explain the American
college friend coming all the way to Thailand to bring the girls a padded bra? A padded
bra?
A special mention must be given to cinematographer Newton Thomas Sigel.
As in the visually excellent The Usual Suspects (1995), Sigel's use of partially
out-of-focus frames helps build tension, particularly within the prison itself. There are
lots of interesting shots, such as when Yankee Hank's airplane lands in Hong Kong, in slow
motion; when it passes the stationary camera we see a huge ship in the background. It all
suggests, without saying a word, the enormity of the city and the task ahead. If only the
screenplay could have matched the photography in subtlety and texture.
- DAK