It is very gutsy of Meg Ryan, who has seduced millions with her cutie-pie image in popular films like Sleepless In Seattle and You've Got Mail, to take on such a sexually explict role.
She also emotes well in this dark, gritty and menacing suspense film.
But the script and direction by Jane Campion, still remembered for her mesmerising The Piano, is so inconsistent you lose interest midway.
Campion is more interested in probing the tortured souls of her main characters than building some real suspense. And she doesn't do a very good job of it either. It is perfectly fine to create a psychological study of a dangerous intimacy in the framework of a thriller, provided the psychological examination doesn't affect the movie's flow.
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These are the kind of performances that would have easily got Oscar nominations had the film been more interesting.
Frannie suspects Malloy as the man with an odd tattoo on his wrist whom she spied having an encounter with a woman in a local bar. The encounter is followed by a horrendous act. Despite her suspicion of Malloy, Frannie cannot help being attracted to him and her half-sister Pauline (Jennifer Jason Leigh) encourages her.
Soon, Frannie has to add one more suspect to her very short list: her ex-boyfriend (unbilled Kevin Bacon). Her nightmares continue as she even suspects her student (Sharrieff Pugh), who is writing a paper that insists on the innocence of a serial killer.
After a while, the film overwhelms the viewer. You can take only so much of the gritty atmosphere. You can take only so much of sex talk. And you can only allow so much of psychoanalysis. You suddenly get the urge then to order Campion to release her characters from the analyst's couch.
CREDITS:
Cast: Meg Ryan, Mark Ruffalo, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Sharrieff Pugh
Director: Jane Campion
Story: Jane Campion, Susanna Moore based on latter's novel, In The Cut
Running time: 114 minutes
Rating: R for sexuality, nudity, language and violence
Distributed by: Screen Gems/Sony