Sunday, March 18, 2007

Dangerous Game

Unlike David Fincher's other movies — say, Fight Club or Panic RoomZodiac is generally a straightforward, no-tricks, procedural drama. If anything, you can say it's quick moving, because the film covers about 20 years in about two-and-a-half hours. There'll be a one minute scene and then the action will jump forward two weeks, or a month, or a year. But maybe I'm getting ahead of myself.

Zodiac tells the true story of the Zodiac killer, who is alleged to have killed about a dozen people in San Francisco starting in 1969 and was never caught. Actually, the film tells the story of the efforts by cops, reporters, and a newspaper cartoonist to figure out the Zodiac's identity. And like I said, they never did solve the case conclusively, but thanks to cartoonist Robert Graysmith's (Jake Gyllenhaal) efforts, they got very close. Actually, the Zodiac killer has already inspired a handful of movies, including Clint Eastwood's original Dirty Harry, which featured a bad guy named "Scorpio" who also threatens to kill schoolchildren.

As you'd expect, this movie features a big cast of well-known actors (Anthony Edwards, Robert Downey Jr., Brian Cox, Philip Baker Hall, Donal Logue, Chloe Sevigny, Adam Goldberg, etc.), but I thought only Mark Ruffalo was worth noting for his performance. In those rare moments when the film sort of drags, his energy keeps it going. And Sevigny actually has a pretty thankless role as Graysmith's wife. But no matter. Zodiac is generally a solid, entertaining film that doesn't really feel as long as it is. That's because it's well-paced and even has a few suspenseful scenes. So I'm going to give it a B+.

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home