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The Gift (2000)
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Several arcs cross in The Gift. Cate
Blanchett is in ascendance, as the film adds another great performance to her relatively
short but already impressive career. Meanwhile,
director Sam Raimi drops a notch. Known for
his quirky and imaginative early works like The Evil Dead and Darkman,
Raimi has migrated to the mainstream with his last few efforts, films that may earn more
at the box office but have yielded little new in the way of technique or style. His by-the-numbers direction of The Gift reduces a potentially involving story of
the paranormal to utter predictability. Blanchett's
seamless and soulful performance deserves better.
Annie
Wilson has a gift. Like young Cole Sear in The
Sixth Sense, she sees dead people. She
also can sense approaching danger and peer vaguely into the future. But Annie is fully aware of her clairvoyant
talents, as is everyone else in bucolic Brixton Georgia, where she's the resident psychic,
fortune teller, confidant and de facto shrink. Annie
is a widowed mother of three young boys who manages to scrape by on the infrequent
"donations" from her varied clientele, people who come to her as much for solace
and a few moments of quiet contemplation of their pasts as for a covert peek into their
future. There's Buddy (Giovanni Ribisi), emotionally stunted from a traumatic childhood of
repressed memories. Valerie (Hilary Swank) is
married to Donnie, a violent and abusive backwoods Cro-Magnon (Keanu Reeves). Like any good therapist, Annie helps her clients
solve their own problems, find their own answers. It's
a sleepy existence until Donnie takes exception to his wife talking to Annie and threatens
both of them, he's angry because Valerie is starting to make up her own mind about a few
things. And when local socialite/bad girl
Jessica King (Katie Holmes) disappears under suspicious circumstances involving Donnie,
her yuppie fiance (Greg Kinnear) convinces police to enlist Annie to help find her.
The
Gift
begins promisingly. Raimi does a good job of
showing Brixton's sleepy pace and the quiet but foreboding beauty of the surrounding
swamps. There are many small satisfying
touches Annie using ESP cards instead of a tarot deck to conduct her readings,
being able to talk to everyone in town about their problems except her own children. But as the missing persons case progresses,
Annie's visions become more troubling, the film's action turns more violent, and the story
swerves off into fairly standard shocker territory. The
film's pacing starts to go awry as an atmosphere of tension and foreboding is repeatedly
built, then squandered as Raimi and writers Billy Bob Thornton and Tom Epperson employ
just about every shock film cliche. The
narrative becomes more disjointed as the mystery continues, with several courtroom scenes
serving as visual speed bumps that slow the pace to almost a halt. In his previous film A
Simple Plan, Raimi captured small town Minnesota with near-reverence, depicting
decent moral people at odds with a moral maelstrom that was engulfing them. Here Raimi shows Brixton as a shallow place,
populating it with a stock collection of southern rubes who
often provoke laughter in scenes where none would seem to be intended.
The
best part of the film by far is Blanchett, who follows her strong work in Elizabeth, Pushing Tin, and The Talented Mr. Ripley with another impressive
job of self-immersion. Annie is a tired
woman, weary from expending so much of her energy helping others find peace that she has
little for herself, and Blanchett captures her carriage, conviction, and dialect with an
accomplished and economical performance. The
rest of the cast produces mixed results. Keanu
Reaves is a good fit as the IQ-impaired Donnie and Katie Holmes makes a convincing ingenue
rebellious and tired of the small-town Brixtron pace.
But Giovanni Ribisi's Buddy is a study in decibels over content, way over the top. He's always had a harrowed look, but here his
eyes are so sunken he resembles a raccoon on chemotherapy.
Greg Kinnear plays Jessica's fiance mostly as a clothes rack for oxford
button-down shirts.
The Gift is a film suffering from
multiple-personality disorder, over the course of its story mutating from spare
psychological thriller to violent shockfest. It
travels a path of least resistance that squanders a great Cate Blanchett performance and
makes one wish that director Sam Raimi had followed the Standard Guide To Scary Movies a
bit less slavishly.
- Bob Aulert