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Friday, September 29, 2006

Blink


- Stowe

This week's movie rental is 1994's Blink, a serial-killer thriller, starring Madeleine Stowe and Aidan Quinn, with Michael Apted directing. It was shot in Chicago and a local band, The Drovers, played a support role as themselves, contributing three songs to the soundtrack.


- Quinn

One of the reasons I rented this movie was that the Stowe character is visually impaired ... not completely blind, but with partial vision, as is true of about 70% of those considered to be "blind", me included. Also interesting was to see what Chicago was like ... I've never been there. Roger Ebert liked it a little more than I did - I had wished the characters a little less cynical, and also wished there had been a few less undressed dead bodies :-) - but still, it was worth a watch. Below is Ebert's review ...



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"Blink" takes the damnedest story and tells it about characters so real they could almost be from a documentary. It sets the action in a Chicago which harbors a serial killer right out of Hollywood - but in the midst of its thriller plot is a portrait of the city that is closely and accurately observed. And the movie contains a love story about two people who, far from falling into each other's arms, might really prefer to be left alone.

The movie stars Madeleine Stowe as Emma Brody, a blind woman who plays violin in a band called the Drovers, who work the North Side bars of Chicago.

She's not your average movie blind woman, all trembling and sensitive. She's independent, tough, smart, cynical, and she likes to take a drink from time to time. Shortly after the movie opens, she is given a corneal transplant, and finds that she can see for the first time. But her mind is overwhelmed by the torrent of visual images, and in defense it begins to edit what she sees; sometimes she may witness something that doesn't "register" until hours later. That man in the hallway, for example, who may have murdered her upstairs neighbor ....

The plot does, of course, sound like typically lurid and melodramatic thriller material. And it is. I was surprised, however, to find it in such a good movie. A lot of the good things come out of the relationship between Stowe and Aidan Quinn, as a cop who gets assigned to the case after she reports she "may" have been a witness to the murder. Quinn and Stowe are able to bring to their characters a certain no-B.S. edge that I recognize as very Chicago. Their rough edges and the way they speak - taking delight in saying exactly what's on their minds - sounds all the more authentic because in so many thrillers the characters talk as if they watch too many daytime soap operas ....

The Quinn and Stowe characters get the notes just right. And the movie portrays Chicago cops with a certain attention to detail; these aren't the wisecrackers of New York or the storm troopers of Los Angeles, but ordinary hardworking guys with a job to do and a bar to go to after they've done it.

The cop is tempted to dismiss his "witness"; after all, how much can you rely on a woman who is recently blind, and "thinks" she might have belatedly seen something? But other things happen to convince her she is right. The cop begins to doubt his own doubts.

And of course they're drawn to one another. But not in the usual Hollywood way, in which they're so attracted that they eventually can't resist going to bed with each other. No, this is more of a Chicago thing, in which they go to bed with each other so much that they eventually can't resist being attracted.

The love-hate friendship between Stowe and Quinn is one of the more authentic relationships I've seen in a genre movie. It feels right. And then on top of it you have the developing thriller plot, with more "visions" and an ominous possible killer, and, inevitably, a scene in which the young woman is too trusting and goes where she shouldn't go. But even then, the screenplay by Dana Stevens has some surprises, and this doesn't end like most of the movies about women in danger and big, strong police ....

"Blink" is an uncommonly good thriller.

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2 Comments:

Blogger PV said...

I like the movie also. And i like your comment on it and on the main characters. I was almost to write all these in German, liebe Crystal.:-). In the last days I was learning German like crazy.:-)

11:52 AM  
Blogger crystal said...

Hi Paula. I've lost most of the German I learned in college, but it's still my favorite foreign language :-)

2:21 PM  

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