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A cool romance in New York
Autumn in New York When hotshot restaurateur and womanizer Will Keane (Richard
Gere) meets Charlotte Fielding (Winona Ryder), she’s a diner in
his restaurant having her 22nd birthday party dinner with
friends. The other guests are quick to chat with him – they all
clearly think this old guy is drop dead gorgeous - but arty
hatmaker Charlotte stays quiet and demure. “Do you speak?” an
already-lusty Will asks. Well, Charlotte doesn’t really speak much, and herein lies one
of the main problems with this film: Given Charlotte’s 22 years
to Will’s 48, what is it that draws these two together? Sure,
it’s partly lust, but to really care about what happens to these
two characters, the audience needs to know why they care about
each other. Will cleverly connives to get Charlotte to go on a date with
him in an awful white dress, one things leads to another and it’s
morning – time to discuss their “relationship”. Will tells
Charlotte he can only offer her “this”, and he’s only being
honest because he really likes her. Charlotte responds that she,
too, can only offer him “this” because she has a terminal illness
and she’s only telling him because she really likes him. And so, despite the warnings of friends – and of Charlotte’s
grandmother (Elaine Stritch) - Will falls for the dying
Charlotte, and Charlotte for some reason falls in love with Will.
The age difference between the two is emphasized by the fact that
Charlotte’s mother also fell for Will, but, the script
emphatically points out, they didn’t sleep together. Yeah, sure!
We already know that would be utterly unlike Will. Ryder, despite slowly succumbing to a fatal illness with no
name, couldn’t possibly look more radiant and vital if she tried
– she’s just inconvenienced by an occasional fainting episode at
dramatically appropriate moments. She and Gere both put in
reasonable performances, but there’s just no convincing chemistry
between the two. Actress-turned-director Joan Chen (Xiu Xiu: the Sent Down
Girl) makes the most of it being autumn in New York, and
cinematographer Changwei Gu does a good job of capturing the
city’s beauty. This is a fine film to watch; besides parks filled
with russet leaves, boats in lakes and ice rinks, there’s
Charlotte in her white bedroom, playing with stringed glass beads
hanging from her ceiling, there’s rainy streets, cozy
restaurants, trendy apartments and eventually there’s a dusting
of snow on the streets to indicate – a little obviously - that
time really is ticking away for Charlotte. There is a subplot of mystery, as an attractive woman (Vera
Farmiga) who could be a former lover tries to find out more about
Will. Who is she? Is she a threat to Will and Charlotte’s
relationship? It’s an interesting diversion that serves to
emphasize the difference in age between Will and Charlotte, and
allows Will a bit of character development, but once her identity
and past is revealed, one has to wonder why Charlotte doesn’t
already know this woman. Plot inconsistencies aside, this is a film that isn’t too
ambitious from the start, so it doesn’t fail to deliver. It’s a
sentimental romance that’s nice to watch; there just should have
been a little more substance to the romance part. |
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All material copyright Samantha Brown 1997-2005 | ||||||||||||||
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