Lush
and jazzy, this beautifully crafted film tells its twisty
noir story without flinching. It's a boiling cauldron swirling
with secrets and half-truths, and as we put the pieces together,
it's absolutely gripping.
Lanny
and Vince (Bacon and Firth) are a 1950s comedy double-act
(think Lewis and Martin); Lanny's staggering outrageousness
is tempered by Vince's gentlemanly Britishness. Then a young
hotel maid (Blanchard) is found dead in their suite. Now
15 years later, in 1972, the young journalist Karen (Lohman)
is working on Vince's biography, looking for answers. And
becoming part of the story. Again.
Egoyan
(and novelist Rupert Holmes, of The Piña Colada Song
fame) are playing with fact and fiction here, as Lanny and
Vince tell vaguely different stories about their past. They're
clearly hiding something, and their voiceover narrations,
plus Karen's, constantly give us conflicting details and
telling observations. But like the best films noir, none
of this is reliable. And we have to sift through the story
to find out what really happened.
Bacon
and Firth deliver full-on performances--charming, energetic
and overflowing with personality, to the point where we
like but don't trust either of them. The script delves tellingly
into issues of fame and privacy, the differences between
stardom and reality, the fact that it's hard to be a nice
guy for the fans--especially when that's not you. And Lohman
is superb as a kind of femme fatale who's both a young child
and a grown woman. It's a deceptively difficult role that
she nails perfectly.
The
story itself is a wonder of shaded coincidences and mysteries
combined with eye-opening scenes, sharply witty dialog and
more plot contortions than you can count. It's all heightened
brilliantly by Mychael Danna's grandly suggestive score,
which segues varied sounds of the 50s and 70s into iconic
pop tunes. And Egoyan plays with us incessantly as he shifts
the power around between the three central characters with
their secretive longings and intricate interconnections.
In the process he really gets under our skin, delivering
one of the most adult thrillers of the year.
Where The Truth Lies Cast:
Kevin Bacon, Colin Firth, Alison Lohman, David Hayman,
Rachel Blanchard, Sonja Bennett, Kathryn Winslow,
Kristin Adams,
Rebecca Davis, Maury Chaykin, Don McKellar, Arsinée
Khanjian