Vanilla
Sky Movie Review:
It has
been said that there is a fine line between sanity and madness
and that some people skirt the edges of the two extremes
daily. This theory also opens the door to larger questions
such as what is sane and what is crazy, and who gets to
make the definition in order to classify an individual or
group. There is also the issue of traumatic stress disorder
where a person may behave in an insane way part of the time,
as a result of a traumatic incident and can return to normal
functioning ability at a moments notice. In the new Cameron
Crowe film Vanilla Sky the issues of the mind,
and its myriad of perceptions comes to the forefront of
larger issues against a backdrop of a life gone out of control.
At the
outset of the film, viewers are introduced to David Aames
(Tom Cruise), a spoiled rich kid, who lives life on his
terms. Having inherited a large publishing empire from his
late father, David spends his time bedding supermodels and
making his own rules. He is a man of position and influence
and the power people all want to be a part of his world
and have a moment of his time. While hosting a lavish Birthday
party for himself, David meets an enticing young lady named
Sofia(Penelope Cruz), who is being escorted to the party
by Davids best friend a writer named Brian Shelby
(Jason Lee). Brian tells David that he really likes Sofia
but is willing to let David have a chance with her in the
interest of friendship. David starts to charm Sofia, but
in doing so draws the jealousy of model Julie Gianni (Cameron
Diaz) as David has been sleeping with her and making no
effort to treat it as any more than a casual thing. David
ignores Julie the rest of the night and eventually takes
Sofia to her place as they spend the night talking and listening
to music. As David is heading home in the morning, he encounters
Julie and she convinces him to take a car ride with her.
What starts out as a fun conversation quickly takes a turn
for the worse as it is revealed that Julie is determined
to make David love her and she believes that since he has
had sex with her, he owes her some sort of emotional response.
In a fit of rage, Julie drives the car off a bridge, killing
herself and leaving David badly disfigured and crippled.
David awakens to find his life hasd gone horribly wrong.
Despite extensive surgery, his face is still a mass of scars,
he has become a shut in, Sofia does not want to be around
him, and the board of his publishing company seems determined
to take control of his company from him.
The story is told in a series of flashbacks as David in
the custody of the Police for a crime that he claims he
did not commit. As David is being interviewed by Dr McCabe(Kurt
Russell), in an effort to determine his sanity to stand
trial, David thinks that he is being setup by the members
of his board in an attempt to gain control of his company.
David eventually reunites with Sofia and has his appearance
restored through a new surgical technique. As David starts
to reclaim his life, his relationship with Sofia grows and
he is happy. Happiness is fleeting for David However as
he starts to see Julie when he is with Sofia. The Sofia
he has grown to love seems to have vanished and been replaced
by the woman he knew as Julia. Complicating matters further
is that pictures of the couple and Davids friends
seem to indicate that Julia is indeed Sofia and that the
woman he knew as Sofia never existed. Faced with these circumstances,
David begins a rapid descent into madness and violence and
begins to question everything while those around him question
his sanity.
Cruise is unsympathetic in the role of David, as the audience
never cares about his character, as despite everything,
he remains the same self-centered individual throughout
the film. Lee and Diaz are sadly underused in the film and
more than once I questioned why someone did not just hit
David and why they continued to let him push them around
even when his influence and power were removed from him.
Penelope Cruz is an cute actress, but she is given little
to do in this film aside from smile and deliver her lines
in an accent that makes it difficult to understand what
she is saying at times and become little more that set dressing
in many scenes. Cruise is getting to old to play the pretty
boy roles and his range of expression in the film is limited
to a frustrated scream and a pseudo calm delivery that sounds
like he is trying to deliver his lines as fast as he can
in some scenes. There is very little chemistry between Cruise
and Cruz and for two people who were supposed to be an on
screen couple while filming I found this hard to believe.
It seems that the whole relationship between them could
have been a studio fabrication to take the attention away
from the divorce and rumors surround Cruise and Nicole Kidman.
The funny thing is, the same thing seemed to happen years
ago with Kidman and Cruise when filming Days of Thunder
while Cruise was divorcing Mimi Rogers amidst a swirl of
rumors. One thing is for certain you can bet that Penelope
Cruz will be given a better range of roles in the future
and the publicity surrounding the stars will create interest
in the film.
The studios have insisted that reviewers do not give the
ending of the film away, and as that is not my policy to
begin with let me just say that it was very absurd and unsatisfying.
Even as the conclusion of the film unfolded, many in the
audience sat in disbelief and commented about the ending
negatively as we exited the theater. The ending could have
worked, but much like the rest of the film, it was a lazy
and uninspired effort. My suggestion is to avoid this film
and instead rent Abre Los Ojos which was the
inspiration for this film.
2
stars out of 5
Gareth Von Kallenbach
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