True
Crime Movie Review:
Clint
Eastwood has a directing style I admire very much. Unlike
many movies out of Hollywood, his films are driven by their
characters. The stories unfold through the feelings, ambitions,
fears, desires, and ultimate actions of those involved.
Often times, he deals more with little details rather than
forcing the plot to a routine, compromised climax.
Eastwood
plays Steve Everett, a reporter who is famous (or infamous,
as the case may be) for having "gut feelings" regarding
many of the stories he reports on. Investigative reporters
rely heavily on intuition, but Everett has recently suffered
a major blow to his credibility; we learn that he publicly
fought to get the conviction of a rapist overturned, only
to have the felon confess to the crime later. When a young
reporter set to do a human interest sidebar on a death row
inmate is killed in a car accident, the editor-in-chief
of the Oakland Tribune (James Woods) hires Everett to do
the story instead. This doesn't sit well with the newspaper's
assignment editor (Denis Leary). This is a human interest
piece, and he is convinced Everett will try to "dig up"
something and turn it into an unnecessary investigation.
The convicted felon is Frank Beechum (Isaiah Washington),
and he is scheduled to be executed one minute after midnight.
Naturally, Everett has his suspicions, and thus, starts
poking around, asking questions, doing more research than
is generally done for a simple human interest story.
Eastwood
pays close attention to detail here, especially in showing
us the necessary preparations for the execution. We see
the warden (Bernard Hill) explaining to Beechum step-by-step
what will take place during his last hour of his life. We
also get shots of the guards documenting every mundane detail
of the prisoner's final hours of existence - the exact time
he awakes, when he requests something, when he goes to the
bathroom, and so forth. I like that attention to detail,
and I also liked the way the movie shows us the eccentricities
of it's characters. Steve Everett may be a good reporter,
but he is a lousy husband and an irresponsible father. He
is unfaithful to his wife (Diane Venora), is currently having
an affair with the assignment editor's wife, and has no
respect whatsoever for any type of authority. We learn as
the film opens that Everett has been on the wagon for two
months, yet he still carries the reckless behavior associated
with any form of addiction. This is clearly shown when he
takes his daughter to the zoo, and in an effort to make
a meeting on time, pushes her in the stroller at a dangerously
high speed, showing her the animals as quickly as possible
until the stroller tips over and she gets hurt. That kind
of attention to character results in many interesting moments.
The
other performances add to the film, including Michael Jeter
as a witness who has recounted his "testimony" so many times
to so many people, he actually becomes offended when Everett
doesn't pull out his tape recorder while the they talk in
a restaurant. I also like the character of Barbara, Everett's
wife. When he tries to reconcile with her by explaining
that he finally understands what went wrong, she quickly
stops him. "You can't line up all the facts and think you
know something about me," she says. And she's right. His
instincts may have helped him break big stories and uncover
scandals, but those very same paranoia-derived instincts
have driven him further and further from any kind of true
meaning in his life. And James Woods is in top form here,
playing Alan Mann, the Oakland Tribune's cynical chief editor.
One of his best moments comes when he wryly explains that
issues are something the media creates so the average citizen
won't feel guilty about his fascination with blood and gore.
Tremendous
performances across the board coupled with Eastwood's skillful
direction make "True Crime" a truly involving film.
Michael Brendan McLarney
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