Lies
and Whispers Movie Review:
There
are many cinematic tellings about the events of World War
II. Some are tragic, some are heroic, some are hopeful,
some are not. Most of these stories, obviously, deal directly
in the years of that war, but there are also the stories
of the people who are affected in some way after the fact,
which are certainly worth telling. Lies And Whispers, a
film from 1997, starring Gina Gershon, is one such story,
detailing the lingering effects of the war on generations
who were never even born during the actual war.
The
film seems innocent enough at first. Gershon plays a child
psychiatrist who goes to a conference in Prague. She runs
into a man who offers to take her in his cab to the conference,
and does not know until a few minutes later that the man
is actually Czeckslovakia`s most famous dissident writer.
Along the way, the two manage a few more meetings, which
then grow into a relationship. Gershon meets the man`s family,
including his father, who suffered torture in the concentration
camps of the Nazi regime. The family seems to like Gershon,
and are quite happy when the couple soon makes plans for
marriage.
At
the same time, Gershon wants to find out more about her
family, especially her father, who recently passed away
and who is of Slavic origion. The couple attempt to find
records, but to no avail. Then, one day, her fiancé`s father
takes a glimpse of Gershon and her father, and is horrified.
It turns out that the old man in the picture, beloved by
Gershon, was in fact one of the Nazi soldiers who participated
in the toruture of people like the writer`s father. Which
means that he will now be related to the daughter of a Nazi.
Yet the fallout is not so simple, as while the old man and
the husband-to-be forgive Gershon, who certainly had nothing
to do with the past, it is Gershon who experiences horror,
guilt and pain.
We
are offered pretty fine evidence that Gina Gershon is an
actual actress. The only times that she has really been
noticed, apparently, is her role in Showgirls, and she also
found herself in a pretty steamy little cable number called
Love Matters. Both these roles were sexually charged, and
part of a lurid atmosphere, and certainly didn`t attempt
to show a thespian in action. And while Gina does somehow
manage to get naked here as well (not an unpleasant sight
to see, mind you), this film is not exactly Showgirls. Actually,
it is a bit of a treat for someone like me to see her in
an obscure foreign film about the sorts of issues which
only Europeans seem to film well, and she makes the best
of it. She has to appear in many tough moments, as she retraces
the awful steps that victims and perpetrators made in concentration
camps, and the numerous areas of torture. She is also drowning
in guilt, shame, and horror, and is quite believable. She
is the one who has to face the knowledge of being related
to a Nazi killer, and is therefore the one who truly feels
wounded. While her lover and his grandfather can at least
separate the woman from the elder who tortured people, she
cannot escape, she cannot pretend that it never happened.
While
Gershon is great, and the premise of the story is interesting,
I think the film should have been a lot better. This is
one of those films which does not benefit from being short
(96 minutes), and which instead wraps things up with a silly
and sappy ending, meant to create a happy romantic ending,
but instead depriving us of important information. Gershon
finds herself in the former Yugoslavia (which is foreshadowed
in the film`s first shot), but we don`t get any explanation
for this. One minute she is in the States, the next, she
is with a bunch of Kosavar children. I have a theory for
what was perhaps meant to be here, mainly the idea that
Gershon is making up for what her grandfather did, by taking
care of children affected by a new war, a new Holocaust,
created by Milosovich and others like him. Of course, this
is a theory not discussed in the actual film. Instead, we
get the sappy romantic ending, which is lame. I don`t want
the sappy! I want Gina`s trial by fire! They missed a great
opportunity to film someone as unexpected as Gina Gershon
wandering around Kosovo, experiencing the ultimate mixture
of guilt, curiosity, and the need to help others, in the
midst of a repeat of a war which everyone else prayed would
never be repeated. That film would be worthy of the Golden
Palm! So while I will give this film a decent rating, for
the issues it does contain, and, of course, for Gina, I
am still somewhat disappointed.
David
Macdonald
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