Nick Gomez's "Drowning Mona" displays an ensemble of interesting and
inventive characters in search of a sharper, more focused screenplay than the
one they have been given. Hand it to the bright, exciting cast for giving it
their all (and they are all obviously having a blast with their roles), but
the script, by Peter Steinfeld, aimlessly wanders around between them, not
knowing where it is going, and resting its rooting interest on the tepid
whodunit plotline.
Mona Dearly (Bette Midler) is the most despised wench living in the small
white trash town of Verplanck, New York, which was the testing site years ago
for the Yugo car company. When she is unable to put on her brakes and flies
right over the cliff and into a watery grave in the opening scene, suspicions
are aroused by Chief Wyatt Rash (Danny DeVito) when he learns the brake lines
had been intentionally cut. Soon, everyone even remotely related to the
maniacal Mona is a suspect, including her husband Phil (William Fichtner) and
her son Jeff (Marcus Thomas), both of which hated her as much as everyone
else. Jeff is landscaping partners with Bobby Calzone (Casey Affleck), who
was consistently verbally and even physically battered by Mona, and he is
about to marry the pretty, tough-spoken Ellen (Neve Campbell). Having an
affair with both Phil and Jeff is Rona (Jamie Lee Curtis), the
straightforward waitress at the local diner, who also may or may not have
killed Mona because she wanted Mona's family to herself.
At just 91 minutes, "Drowning Mona" feels drug out, and one of the reasons
for this is that the film always seems like it is finally going to take off
with its story, and in the interactions of the Verplanck inhabitants, but it
never truly does. Occasionally, there will be a spark of wit and originality,
as when Rona and Phil, meeting at their usual hotel room for a tryst, use the
"Wheel of Fortune" game as foreplay. But more often than not, the humor just
isn't edgy enough to work the way it should, and at least one of the
detractors of this is its bothersome PG-13 rating when it very well could
have been R, and probably a whole lot funnier. That isn't to say the film has
no laughs; one scene, in particular, drove me to tears, and I missed the
whole next scene because I couldn't get over the previous one. Too bad the
laughs are relatively few and far between.
Advertised as one of the major stars of the picture, Bette Midler actually
only pops up sporadically, and even then it is only for a minute or two each
time, via flashbacks that are supposed to present her as this evil woman, but
fails. Sure, she has a hot temper, but she doesn't seem all that bad, and in
the one good flashback sequence Midler is given, Mona loses at a
knife-throwing contest and expresses her frustration for not ever being a
winner at anything in her life. Otherwise, Midler is sorely underused, but at
least better than she was in the recent stinker, "Isn't She Great."
Of the rest of the cast, only Danny DeVito is disappointing, not because of
his performance, but because his character is the one that gets very few
funny things to say. The high points are most certainly Neve Campbell, who is
shaping up to be a promising major talent in Hollywood, if only she starts to
choose her projects a little more wisely (her upcoming Sundance hit, "Panic,"
co-starring William H. Macy, is a good start), and especially Jamie Lee
Curtis, who it is nice to see again after not appearing in a feature film in
over a year. Curtis joyously gets right into her character, and the film
always gains the most mileage out of her appearances. And Will Ferrell, as a
balding mortician with a taste for taking kinky pictures of scantily clad
women in his backroom, demonstrates his sheer comic timing to his few scenes.
Undoubtedly made on a limited budget, the cinematography, by Bruce Douglas
Johnson, is particularly flat for a wide-release motion picture, and after
seeing his 1997 misfire, "Illtown," and now the superior, but still not very
good "Drowning Mona," it is safe to say director Gomez is never going to be
winning any Oscars. Relying on the performances alone, try as they might,
they simply cannot withhold the weight of the film all by themselves.
"Drowning Mona" has promise, and it has occasional flare, but for the most
part, it is a string of missed opportunities.
Copyright © 2000 Dustin Putman