There's
a sparky charm to this multi-strand black comedy about tangled
romance in the land of the honeymoon, Niagara Falls. But
as a film, it never quite comes together into anything very
meaningful.
The characters
circle around each other in a seedy motel managed by a grieving
young widower (Ferguson). In the honeymoon suite, Lily and
Henry (Crewson and Keleghan) are actually homeless, desperate
for work and barely able to stand each other. While Henry
contemplates jumping over the falls, Lily learns from the
hooker (Bridges) next door. Pregnant waitress Loretta (Dhavernas)
is balancing two proposals: from a pornographer (Pollak)
and a squeaky-clean Mormon (Barnett). And Denise and RJ
(Friel and Holden-Reid) are just trying to stay straight
enough to get their baby back from a social worker (Green).
With an involving
pace and a sharp sense of bleak wit, the film is extremely
watchable, even though it's a bit fragmented and unfocussed.
Besides the general relationship theme, nothing connects
the three main plot strands, which leaves the film feeling
superficial even as it digs in and examines several fairly
serious issues. It's the problem of subtext: nothing is
happening here beyond what we see on screen.
That said, the
actors create vivid characters. Friel is especially good
as the teetering-on-the-brink Denise, while Crewson gets
the most soul-searching scenes as the abandoned-then-resolute
Lily. Each character is a bundle of intriguing contradictions--depressed
and clingy, then proactive and hopeful--riding wave after
wave of emotion. So even if it doesn't quite hold together
on the larger scale, the small stories are both compelling
and entertaining.
The
comedy comes mostly in the absurdity of the interaction--the
way people seem to always get it wrong when dealing with
each other. Some of this is amusingly observant, while other
plotlines feel contrived and over-reliant on coincidence
or actual miracles. Combined with a macabre emphasis on
death, this uneven tone makes the film rather difficult
to like. Fortunately, there are enough moments of dark humour
and raw emotion to make it just about worth the effort.
Niagara Motel Written By:
George F Walker, Dani Romain
Niagara Motel Cast:
Anna Friel, Wendy Crewson, Craig Ferguson, Kevin Pollak,
Caroline Dhavernas, Kristen Holden-Reid, Peter Keleghan,
Tom Barnett,
Catherine Fitch, Janet-Laine Green, Krista Bridges,
Normand Daneau