The Safety of Objects
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 7 March 2003
Still
Objects seem safe. Unknowing and un-needy, they absorb desires and
ask nothing in return, accommodating by definition. That's why you
brush your doll's hair, trick out your car, frame your art. You can
love your objects without fear of rejection. Or so you think. Rose
Troche's The Safety of Objects, which she adapted from A. M.
Homes' short stories, suggests otherwise. Here, objects offer only
temporary respite, and when you realize they can't sustain the
illusion of safety, the drop-off is devastating.
To
make this rather obvious point, The Safety of Objects offers
a series of disturbing relationships between humans and their chosen
objects, most obsessive or destructive, all selfish and
distressingly heedless. These relationships fester in a suburban
neighborhood, where folks have too much time and space, too many
objects around them. In this, the movie resembles other recent burb-breakdowns,
from Ang Lee's sobering Ice Storm and any of Todd Solondz's
increasingly grim visions to the portentous American Beauty
and the soapy Life as a House.
Much
like these films, Safety features a range of characters,
across four families, harboring lots of secrets. Lawyer Jim Train
(Dermot Mulroney), for example, is passed over for a promotion and
walks out, not exactly quitting (so his secretary wonders when he's
coming back, and covers for him) and explaining his sudden
appearance back home as the result of a "bomb threat." (The
terrorists have won, perhaps, when they serve as an excuse for this
self-indulgent dweeb.) When Jim suspects that his wife Susan (Moira
Kelly) is having an affair (and even more monumentally, for him,
feels pressured by her request for a new dishwasher), Jim resets his
own sights on a great big object -- an SUV that a local radio
station is giving away, in a contest at the mall.
When
he finds that he's too late to enter the contest (one of those
keep-one-hand-on-the-vehicle-till-all-other-drop deals), Jim
compromises in order to reach his all-important goal. He picks a
likely winner, his neighbor Esther Gold (Glenn Close). She's already
in the contest at the urging of her daughter Julie (Jessica
Campbell), who wants the car less than she wants her mom to get it
for her. Julie's reason for being so needy is obvious: for months,
Esther has been spending all her time attending to another object,
Julie's comatose brother Paul (Joshua Jackson). Glimpsed in
flashbacks that lead, slowly, to the car accident that leaves him in
this state, once aspiring rock star Paul now lies hooked up to tubes
and gauges, still and unchanging. (And frankly, it's not a little
weird to see Pacey so laid out.) For Esther, Paul's ever-after
unconsciousness makes him perversely safe to love: he'll never leave
her, never get in trouble worse than what he's in now.
Paul
is thus the film's most excruciating object, and his vegetative
condition -- so resonant and so inexorable -- affects everyone. As
Esther makes him the focus of her desperate devotion, Julie and his
father (Robert Klein) withdraw in horror and guilt, and his
girlfriend, Annette (excellent Patricia Clarkson), feels herself the
object of everyone's accusations. She's not wrong, especially when
it comes to the couple of girls who had crushes on Paul, now
checking out his coma-penis under the covers and watching Annette
through her bedroom window, across the yard.
The
film's objects continue to accumulate: Annette's daughter Sam
(Kristen Stewart) is bravely tending to her autistic sister (Haylee
Wanstall), and bearing up under her mom's moodiness and drinking and
her dad's astonishing selfishness (he comes to visit only to
announce that he's marrying his decidedly unmaternal younger
girlfriend, then accuses Annette of turning his children against
him).
Sam
focuses her energies on basketball and her lively best friend Sally
(Charlotte Arnold), daughter of the wise and weary Helen (Mary Kay
Place, who steals every scene she's in, as usual). They smoke
cigarettes, they giggle, they share secrets. But for all her efforts
to fashion a life for herself outside the pathologies of adults, Sam
can't quite elude all damage. She's been turned into another sort of
object by the local gardener, Randy (Timothy Olyphant), himself
mourning a terrible loss and fixated on Sam, not for her, but for
what he projects onto her.
For
all the objectification and distraction going on in The Safety of
Objects, one relationship does stand out. Taking a cue from his
frightened and frustrated father Jim, young Jake Train (Alex House)
has found the ideal target for his adoration, a Barbie-type doll
named Tani (perfectly, and deviously, voiced by Guinevere Turner,
star of Troche's first film, Go Fish). Technically, the doll
belongs to Emily (Charly Chalom), but whenever Jake has a chance, he
takes her away for a bit of kissy-face and lustful chatter.
While
the film tends to offer these stolen moments as a kind of dire
comedy, as when, in a family restaurant scene, he takes Tani under
the table to converse, as his fellow diners look on in some
distress. Jake is, of course, emulating behavior he's seen
elsewhere, his father's for instance, treating people (his kids, his
wife, his coworkers) like objects, unable to imagine they have
feelings or needs commensurate to his own.
But beyond the like-father,
like-son match, Jake also reflects most everyone in this
neighborhood, and, the film implies, the extended community of
self-involved individuals that comprises the burbs. This makes
Jake's story funny, if you're feeling superior, and tragic, if
you're feeling sympathetic. In any case, if you're feeling anything
for someone who's not you, you're a step ahead. |
Written and
Directed
by:
Rose Troche
Starring:
Glenn Close
Dermot Mulroney
Jessica Campbell
Patricia Clarkson
Joshua Jackson
Moira Kelly
Robert Klein
Timothy Olyphant
Mary Kay Place
Kristen Stewart
Alex House
Haylee Wanstall
Stephanie Mills
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
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