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A Simple Plan (1998)
A Simple Plan has been heavily promoted as director
Sam Raimi's graduation from the B-movie ranks. He demonstrates here a high degree of
technical skill, accomplishing some handsome mood building with snow scenes, hovering
crows, a fox in the hen house. But, despite a promising beginning, A Simple Plan
unravels sadly in its second half, most of what transpires being utterly predictable, and
what is not predictable, simply unbelievable.
The premise is an
old one: three essentially law abiding men find a downed airplane, the frozen corpse of
the pilot, and four million dollars or so in $100 bills. The expected discussion of
"call the police" or "take the money and run" ensues. Of course, if
they called the police, there wouldn't be a movie, though maybe that would be an
interesting premise for a more imaginative screenwriter. Greed is the motivator; human
foolishness and the insecurities of moral people doing immoral things provide the turns in
the plot which grows less plausible and more violent as it weaves its weary way to its
unsurprising conclusion. CV will not provide further details of the plotting for fear of
spoiling the viewing for those who choose to see the film despite what they read here.
The performances are
solid. Billy Bob Thornton turns out still another impaired country boy role. He makes the
character reasonably credible within the constraints of the flawed script and it is really
the only character in the roster of more than passing interest. Bill Paxton and Bridget
Fonda acquit themselves competently, but, as with the overall film, are weighted with the
humorlessness and the lack of anything but the most obvious motivations. This is a
thriller without thrills, a morality tale without subtlety or noticeable irony.
- Arthur Lazere