Enough
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 24 May 2002
You
can run...
J-Lo
rocks combat boots. And it is truly a wonderful moment when she
laces on a pair of steel-toed kicks in preparation to beat down her
abusive husband in Michael Apted's Enough. Unfortunately, you
have to sit through a lot of awkward plotting to get to it.
First,
Slim (Jennifer Lopez) is a waitress with her pal Ginny (Juliette
Lewis, who actually looks like she might work in a diner, unlike
Lopez), with Sheryl Crow's "All I Wanna Do" on the
soundtrack. Slim is so great, she calls customers by name and leans
down to pick up a child's toy when it's fallen on the floor. Within
a few minutes, she meets a suspicious character who shows up with a
rose for her, one Robbie (Noah Wyle). She's about to fall for it,
when she's warned away by another guy in the next booth, Mitch
(Billy Campbell), who says Robbie's trying to "get in [her]
pants" on a $200 bet. Hmmph. Slim is annoyed enough that her
judgment is impaired, and she dates the eminently and immediately
creepy Mitch instead. Or maybe her judgment isn't impaired; maybe
she really is as clueless as she seems at this moment.
Cut
to series of wedding photos, under a feeble cover of "This
Guy's In Love With You," and the wedding party. She's radiant,
he's super-rich, and you find out by way of leaden exposition
(courtesy of writer Nicholas Kazan) that her dad abandoned her when
she was young and she's distrustful of men but desperate to be
"safe." Again, this might be a way to explain away her
terrible judgment, but if she's been so picky before Mitch, why fall
for his line? Perhaps it's because he's a billionaire, apparently
through his work as a contractor. He appears at a worksite wearing a
hardhat for about twenty seconds, but other than that, the film
offers no clue how he's made his money. He's rich and he's bad. What
else do you need to know?
Well,
for one thing, it might be useful to know what Slim thinks she's
doing. There are plenty of early signs that this guy is not in love
with her, but with himself, signs to which she remains willfully
ignorant. Just so, Mitch and pregnant wifey are driving along a
tree-lined street, when he pulls up to a house that she has
apparently admired (you don't see that part: you only see the creepy
part). Mitch knocks on the door and offers a whopping big check to
the guy who answers. It's not for sale, he whimpers. "I'm very
determined," grins/threatens Mitch, with his back to Slim, who
smiles obliviously and pats her round tummy. The homeowner,
meanwhile, looks alarmed and unsettled, and abruptly agrees to sell
(in other words, this total stranger can spot what she cannot). Cut
to post-birth scene, where Slim lies sweaty in her hospital bed and
Mitch cuddles the infant, wholly ignoring his wife. She frowns,
briefly, then settles back to smile and watch him be a good dad.
Her
child grows up to be the predictably precocious Gracie (Tessa
Allen), and suddenly, Slim gets a clue, noting that Mitch is not
paying attention (the man turns down a shower with J-Lo: what
is he thinking?). Trying to distract herself, maybe, she cooks a few
meals, then one night, in the kitchen, she answers his pager and
hears a woman's voice. Gadzooks! He's a wily cad! And when Slim
confronts him, he cops to all of it, insisting that this is the way
it is, because he's a man and men have different needs than women.
Her husband is a psychopath and somehow she's missed it all these
years. Plus, he makes the money around here, so she'll shut up and
take it, because, he says, "it's my rules." Cue menacing
music.
The
other detail in this arrangement according to Mitch is that he gets
to beat Slim whenever he wants to. She's surely not pleased with any
of this, but learns quickly that there's no way out. Just in case
you're not paying attention (and there's all kinds of reasons that
you might not be), the film lays out its narrative points in
intertitles between major scenes: "How They Met,"
"More Than Enough," "You Can Run." But, well,
you know what you can't do.
Still,
poor Slim tries. She has another eighty minutes or so to fill until
she gets to put on those boots and kick Mitch's pathetic ass. Ginny
and a few friends help her escape one night, but, quelle
surprise, he closes down all her credit cards. When she
finally settles into a motel room, he calls and is able to quote
back to her her last bit of conversation with Gracie. "It's the
information age," he says, by way of explanation, though it
doesn't rally explain how he has so very much information on her.
At
first, she goes to obvious hiding places, like the Seattle home of
an ex-boyfriend, Joe (Dan Futterman, too charming to be wasted in
this role). After exchanging some pleasantries and getting a shower,
their idyll is busted up by a trio of thugs posing as FBI. Slim
decides she's tired of putting everyone she loves in danger and asks
the advice of a lawyer (Bill Cobbs), who has a two minute scene
during which he informs her that, because she's never reported the
abuse, she's "screwed," and Campbell will likely kill her.
How helpful.
You
can see why she gets a little gonzo in her efforts to rid herself of
this scourge. One of her more desperate moves -- one that pays off
handsomely, for her and you -- is to track down her long-absent,
much-estranged, super-wealthy, and apparently unloved dad, whose
name is, inexplicably and joyously, Jupiter (Fred Ward, who is
terrific, as always, juicing up the precious few minutes he's on
screen). He dismisses her at first ("from '68 to '72, I had
like 5 kids..."), then decides to send her wads o' cash when
that same trio of thugs comes a calling after she's gone. Any girl
who's been able to rile up such assholes is, apparently, a-okay by
him.
Jupiter's
cash flow is most excellent. And she spends it wisely, on a new
house, some booby traps, Krav Maga martial arts lessons, an extra
escape vehicle, and some extremely high tech gadgets she uses to rig
a big showdown with Mitch. This elaborate preparation scene recalls
Nancy getting ready to face off with Freddy Krueger, except Slim's
devices are far more elaborate and expensive than buckets and axes.
He deserves his punishment, no doubt, but it's a tedious and
predictable process. At least she does the boot thing.
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Directed
by:
Michael Apted
Starring:
Jennifer Lopez
Billy Campbell
Juliette Leis
Fred Ward
Dan Futterman
Bill Cobbs
Noah Wyle
Written by:
Nicholas Kazan
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some
material may be
inappropriate for
children under 13.
FULL CREDITS
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