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Review by Dustin Putman
2½ stars out of 4
"Twin Falls Idaho," by first-time directors and real-life brothers Michael
and Mark Polish, manages to be a film about the potentially "tabloid" topic
of siamese twins, but does not exploit this heavy subject matter. Instead,
they have made an indie drama that is mature and discerning, about the close
bond between siblings, and about the struggle of these two accepting people
who have been dealt a certain hand in life, even while struggling to break
free as individuals. If the film sometimes is a little too obvious and the
dialogue doesn't constantly ring true, it is clear that the Polish Brothers
have a definite talent as rising filmmakers, and due to their own closeness,
have concocted a picture that is satisfying, solely based on the finely-tuned
relationships that they have created between the three pivotal characters.
Penny (Michele Hicks) is a down-on-her-luck young woman who is broke and
without any certain idea of where her life is headed. Sometimes prostituting
herself for the much-needed cash, Penny winds up one evening at the scummy
hotel room of her latest client, Francis (Michael Polish). When Francis
enters into the room, however, and she discovers that he is one-half of a
pair of siamese twins, Penny flees. After realizing that she left her purse
at their place and feeling rather guilty for her unsympathetic behavior
before, Penny goes back to the hotel to discover that Francis is actually
very ill, and it is his brother, Blake (Mark Polish), who is the much
stronger of the two. "How come you don't get sick too?" Penny asks, to which
Blake replies, "Because if I got sick, who would take care of Francis?" Penny
ultimately begins a close friendship with them, mostly because she detects an
emotional closeness due to her own alienation from the world, and a brief
romance appears to blossom between her and Blake, only to end with the cold,
hard realization that it would never work out. "Maybe I'll call you when I'm
single," Blake tells her humorously, but with an unavoidably very serious
undercurrent.
"Twin Falls Idaho" is not set, as you may first assume, in Twin Falls, Idaho,
but rather it is just one of many symbols that end up being just a little too
heavy-handed for their own good. Symbolism is a tricky thing to do
successfully, as it should almost always be of the subtle persuasion in which
you have to think long and hard about certain things before you would even
process that it was, in fact, a symbol. A recent, efficient example of this
would be Stanley Kubrick's "Eyes Wide Shut," whose symbols, if you aren't
paying close attention, could potentially fly straight over your head.
Although not a serious, damaging criticism, "Twin Falls Idaho" is not so
refined in this respect. For example, 'Twin' stands for the two brothers
being twins, 'Falls' is their last name, and 'Idaho' is the name of the hotel
they are staying in. Early on, Penny is oddly given a two dollar bill as
change from a taxi driver, and her own name, Penny, symbolizes singularity,
which further portrays the conflict between the idea of 'one' and 'two.'
Even if "Twin Falls Idaho" also is stronger in its set-up and first half, as
opposed to its predictable, somewhat maudlin conclusion, the film is buoyed
over to being recommended, if marginally so, because of the impressive
performances and the one-of-a-kind relationship between the brothers, which
is just about as believable and heartfelt as any sibling relationship has
ever been portrayed on film. It would be too easy to group Blake and Francis
as one being, and both are wisely given differing, distinctive personalities,
even when they are also presented as being just about as close to one another
as two people could possibly be, both physically and spiritually. Blake and
Francis believe that being siamese twins is the only way they would prefer
life, because that's the only way that they've ever known. At one point,
Blake tells Penny, "We came into this world together, and we're leaving it
together, too." And yet, Blake can't help but see Penny as his sort of
savior, an understanding, virtuous light at the end of the tunnel, whom he
starts to love, if only he could be alone with her. In one of the film's most
powerful scenes, Blake and Francis trudge out for a night on the town during
Halloween, the only day of the year when they blend in with everyone else and
are accepted as "normal" people. Ending up at a party that Penny invites them
to, they see another two attendants that have dressed up as siamese twins,
but sadly witness them untying the strings between one another and going off
in their own separate directions. For Blake and Francis, it isn't that easy.
In her film debut, model Michele Hicks is remarkable as Penny, the character
with the most noticable arc. Hicks turns Penny into an experienced,
hard-edged lost soul who nonetheless is extremely vulnerable to the world
around her and unsure of what she wants to do with her life. For the story
between the brothers to work, there had to be a third party that could come
in and add an emotional center to the film, which Hicks brilliantly does. She
is the one we follow most in the film, as we root for her to get out of her
job as a hooker and redirect her path, no matter where it may take her.
"Twin Falls Idaho" is flawed in many ways (it also falls victim to a couple
particular lines of dialogue that feel completely "written"), but its virtues
also cannot be denied. The restrictive, unusual, but fully caring position
that Blake and Francis are in is no better identified than between a touching
exchange between Blake and Penny. "Do you ever get lonely?" she inquires. His
answer: "For two minutes--just two minutes--each day, right after I wake up
and right before I fall asleep, I'm alone. It's pretty difficult to ever be
lonely."
Copyright © 1999 Dustin Putman
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