Review by Dustin Putman
3 stars out of 4
Steve Soderbergh's "sex, lies, and videotape," which won the Grand Prize
at the Cannes Film Festival in 1989, arguably began the resurgence of
independent films. Made on a shoestring budget of $1.2 million, with
then relatively unknown actors, it is a provocative, thoroughly original
drama.
The film mostly focuses on the four central characters, all in their
late 20's-early 30's. Ann (Andie MacDowell), an unfulfilled housewife,
is married to John (Peter Gallagher), an insensitive lawyer, who,
unbeknownst to her, is having an affair with her younger sister, Cynthia
(Laura San Giacomo). Complicating matters even worse is Graham (James
Spader, who won Best Actor at Cannes), John's old college buddy, who
comes to stay at their house. Ann is absolutely won over by him, even
though she clearly has stated that she has very little interest in sex.
That is the set-up for the last hour of the picture, and since the film
is entitled, "sex, lies, and videotape," it is best to keep the rest of
the story developments at bay so that they will come as a genuine
surprise.
Director Steven Soderbergh has proven to be a wildly offbeat filmmaker,
ranging from the independent, to the mainstream (1998's "Out of Sight"),
to the downright Kafkaesque (1997's "Schizopolis"). He is the type of
director who obviously takes a lot of chances, and believes in the work
that he does, and, "sex, lies, and videotape," is probably his most
confident, and maybe even best, to date.
The performances are superb from all four leads, but MacDowell stands
out in what is probably the main character. She is always a very winning
actress, but this is probably her most three-dimensional role that she
has had (with a close second being Altman's 1993 mosaic, "Short Cuts").
The other parts are perfectly cast as well, from Spader's ominous
Graham, to Gallagher's self-involved John, to Giacomo's outspoken
Cynthia.
The final act of the film, especially, comes right out of left field,
and turns out to be both shocking and oddly touching, and it would be
criminal to give away the film's secrets. Suffice to say that, through
one powerful sequence, Ann is able to somewhat come out of her shell,
and John learns a valuable lesson about honesty, as well as deception.
The film has one fault , however. The characters are almost all
emotionally cold and isolated from one another, and often unlikable. If
there had been a few extra scenes with Gallagher, it probably would have
helped, since his relationship with MacDowell isn't quite as explored as
I would have liked.
"sex, lies, and videotape," although minorly flawed, is still easily a
brave and adult motion picture that is far more mature and honest about
its subject matter than the usual film. Soderbergh clearly knew what he
was doing while he was making it, and the final product certainly proves
this.
Copyright © 1999 Dustin Putman
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