Lost Souls
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 13 October 2000
Evil
With a Capital E
Winona
Ryder's kohl- and shadow-blackened eyes are the most stunning
special effect in Lost Souls. Her eyes are always large and
gorgeous, of course, which means that accentuating them like this
might seem like overkill. But in context, I must say that the effect
is quite splendid, that context being yet another tedious hoo-boy-the-devil's-among-us
movie.
This
isn't to say that everything around her doesn't look
fabulous. Directed by the great Polish-born cinematographer Janusz
Kaminski (whose momentous work includes Schindler's List, Saving
Private Ryan, Amistad, Lost World -- basically all
the recent super-Spielberg films -- and oh yeah, Jerry Maguire),
Lost Souls makes the most of its requisite locations. The
church interiors, the rectories, the tiny cell-like apartments, the
mental hospital wards, the city streets -- they all look like
they've been dreamed up by a hugely derivative but very tasteful set
designer who's working with a decent budget. The light is golden
and/or filtered gray (the kind where the dust particles become
visible in shafts of light across plain wood floors), but most often
just dark and squirmy, and when someone gets hold of a flashlight,
well, stand back: Mulder and Scully have nothing on these guys. The
architecture is also grandly creepy, not quite on the scale of
Frankenstein's castle and bat-filled belfries, but still working its
urban milieu to a shadowy and harrowing perfection, which is
enhanced by what look to be buckets of rain dumped on characters at
every crucial-decision moment (and by the end of the film, these
moments are coming fast and hard). And, it goes without saying, the
rain tends to make Ryder's pale and haunted countenance look even
more pale and haunted, framed as it is by her dark, long, wet hair.
And her eyes.. well, I've already extolled their virtues.
But
you know what they say about judging books by their covers. For all
these great surfaces, Lost Souls is pretty much a flat-liner.
Industry gossip has it that it was on the shelf for more than a
year, which means someone had serious doubts about it, and for a
long time. It's a grim irony that New Line decided to go ahead and
release it, finally, right on the heels of the re-release of The
Exorcist, which has everyone chatting nostalgically about how
scared they were when they first saw it, and comparing it to all its
many, many, variously enfeebled descendants, most recently, Arnold's
earnest End of Days (the Terminator and the Devil,
mano-a-mano), Polanski and Depps' silly The Ninth Gate (at
least Frank Langella looked like he was having a good time), and Kim
Basinger's woeful Bless the Child (and frankly, there's no
telling what possesses her when she makes script choices). The
release of Lost Souls (which lists Meg Ryan as a producer)
has done nothing to stem this decline.
Winona
plays Maya Larkin, a former Satanic-possession case (you see her
apparently quite painful exorcism in a few economical flashbacks),
who has since dedicated herself to fighting Evil, the kind with a
capital E. At the start of the film, she and her comrades --
including Father Lareaux (John Hurt) and a rather intense deacon
(Elias Koteas, who should have a handle on this fiendish tomfoolery
by now, having appeared in last year's similarly-themed and
underappreciated Fallen) -- are making it their business to
rid good bodies of their internal demons. To this end, they run an
exorcism on a guy named Henry (John Diel), currently incarcerated in
a hospital for the criminally insane for murdering his entire
family, under the auspices of a doctor (Alfre Woodard) who doesn't
believe in this spiritual mumbo-jumbo but for some reason allows the
crusaders (and they do march in like superheroes, their robes
billowing in slow motion, captured in a series of low-angle
aren't-they-formidable shots) to proceed. Though the exorcism is
mostly disastrous, the intrepid crew learns that Satan is about to
come to earth in human form. And no, he's not showing up as
Elizabeth Hurley. Rather, he's going to inhabit a human male body --
one that has been carefully raised and will be ready at age
thirty-three, and one that's arguably as pretty as Hurley's. This
man-about-to-be-"transformed" (this would be the repeated,
technical term) is one Peter Kelson (Ben Chaplin, who also has
unusually large dark eyes: if he were a girl, he'd be Winona Ryder).
Kelson
is a best-selling author, specifically, a biographer-analyst of
serial and mass killers, as well as a popular television talk show
guest (and you know the Dark Prince is always looking for access to
media!). This last point is very convenient, as it allows Maya to
hear his name announced one day while she's working in her cell-like
room where she lives at Father Lareaux's church. She also hears him
say that he has a well-defined notion of what makes bad people bad,
which is, in a nutshell, that there is no such thing as "Evil
with a capital E." You see where this is headed: he's destined
to hook up with our lovely sour girl Maya, who has a deep and
abiding belief in just that sort of Evil. Still, when she comes with
the bad news that he is about to become the Satanic Possession Case
to beat all, the Anti-Christ Himself, Peter is, understandably,
skeptical. So he sends her packing. But then, after about a minute,
he starts a-wondering... hmmm, just what does it mean that my Uncle
James (Philip Baker Hall), a priest, has been behaving so strangely?
That his parishioners wear black all the time? That my brother (W.
Earlman Brown) looks like Mark David Chapman and can't seem to stop
eating even just after there's just been an attempt on my life and
the cops are interviewing us? Or that my pretty blond girlfriend
(Sarah Wynter) has drawn a huge pentagram on the ceiling of the
apartment right below our bedroom? And why, oh why, is it always
raining?
The
movie is clearly invested in Peter's struggle, with the possibility
or even the necessity of faith. It's imperative for the Big Plan
that he does not properly believe in anything -- God or the Devil.
It just wouldn't be appropriate for Satan's vessel. And there are
other measures Peter has to make, for instance, he has to have been
born of incest, never been baptized, and have dreams of the numbers
666, stuff like that (perhaps the weirdest "personal data"
point revealed about Peter -- by a police psychic, of all people --
is that his male research assistant has a crush on him, but the film
rushes by that revelation, like it just can't quite deal with it).
But as interesting as all this Peter-info is, Maya is really the
film's focus. Partly that's because she's Winona, and partly because
Maya is our point of entry, which means we spend most of your time
-- and it does feel like you're watching all this unfold for a long,
long time -- with her. The camera loves to make long slow passes
over her beautifully furrowed brow, to contemplate her slight,
overburdened figure as she studies Father Lareaux's books.
And
for those hoping for a little action, there are a couple of scenes
which take you inside Maya's head. On the up side, this allows for
some impressive digitized effects, as when a public bathroom turns
all alive and creepy-crawly like rooms in The Shining's
Overlook Hotel. But instead of floods of blood, the
already-puke-green bathroom gets all throbbing and loud, then gushy
and replete with overflowing sewage, crumbling walls, and a stalker
coming at her with a big shiny knife. Eww. Maya knows enough not to
believe Beelzebub's scams, and basically blows him off during this
horrific display, but not until you get a good idea of how ripe it
must be in that bathroom in her mind. Eventually, it is precisely
her strength of mind -- her faith but also, more importantly, her
will -- that is of greatest consequence in this battle for the
future of the planet. That none of it feels of much consequence to
us, well, that's a problem.
|
Directed by:
Janusz Kaminski
Starring:
Winona Ryder
Ben Chaplin
Philip Baker Hall
Elias Koteas
Sarah Wynter
John Beasley
Written by:
Pierce Gardner
FULL
CREDITS
BUY
VIDEO
|
|