‘Mystic River’ best of year so far
VAN NOVACK
It was with great anticipation that I awaited the release of “Mystic
River,” the latest film directed by Clint Eastwood. Even though it
didn’t win the coveted Palme d’Or at last May’s Cannes Film Festival,
the positive “buzz” surrounding this picture has been intense.
Besides the association with Eastwood, “Mystic River” has perhaps the
most stellar cast of any recent film boasting such celebrated actors
as Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Kevin Bacon, Laurence Fishburne, Marcia
Gay Harden, and Laura Linney. Between them, the stars of “Mystic
River” have been nominated for seven Academy Awards.
Based on the bestseller by Dennis Lehane, “Mystic River” tells the
story of three boys, now men, from a blue-collar Boston neighborhood.
The men, Jimmy (Penn), Dave (Robbins), and Sean (Bacon), were fast
friends as boys but were all affected in varying degrees by the
abduction and molestation of Dave 25 years ago. Posing as cops, two
men ordered Dave into their car and held him for four days before he
could escape.
Now adults, the men have drifted apart emotionally although not
physically as they are still attached to the old neighborhood. Jimmy,
after serving two years for armed robbery 16 years before, has
settled into the life of husband and father of three girls. Jimmy now
owns a small grocery store in the old neighborhood. Dave is still
there too, but is barely hanging on as a marginally employed
semi-alcoholic handyman who dotes on his young son. Sean is now a
homicide detective but is haunted by his departed wife who calls him
constantly but never says a word.
The three men are brought back together by tragic circumstances.
Jimmy’s 19-year-old daughter, Katie, is brutally murdered. Dave was
one of the last people to see her alive and Sean is investigating her
murder. On the night of Katie’s murder, Dave came home suspiciously
late, bleeding from his stomach and hand, claiming he fought off a
mugger. Even Dave’s wife Celeste (Harden) comes to suspect him of
Katie’s murder as the events have brought his childhood trauma back
to the forefront of his consciousness and he is acting strangely.
Jimmy is absolutely devastated by the murder of his daughter, but
his grief manifests itself in an obsessive desire for murderous
revenge. A race between Jimmy and the cops to find the murderer
begins and the intricate web of past acts and sins linking all the
players soon unfolds.
Clint Eastwood says this film, “is the best I can do.” Despite
directing “Unforgiven,” which earned him an Oscar for Best Picture
and Best Director, “Mystic River” is really his masterpiece. Eastwood
never makes a false move in this film. There is a simplicity and a
realism that a heavy hand could not have achieved. Everything is
perfect, including the locations, clothing, cars and bit players.
Eastwood allows the marvelous cast to give the performances of their
lives. This is especially true of Penn and Robbins who might receive
Best Actor and Best Actress Academy Award nominations.
Not enough can be said of these two performances. When he learns
of his daughter’s murder, Penn is a black hole of grief, the pain
etched on his weathered face and evident in every fiber of his being.
Later Penn realistically morphs into a revenge-seeking killer, all
the more frightening because of the coldness of his resolve. Robbins
changes from the “damaged goods” man-child sleepwalking through
adulthood to a very disturbed man now visibly struggling to maintain
his sanity as long-suppressed demons emerge from his soul.
“Mystic River” is the type of picture you remember long after the
house lights come back on. This film will haunt you and make you
ponder the ironies of seemingly unconnected acts. After opening in
only 13 theaters nationally the first week of its release, “Mystic
River” is now playing at over 1,500 theaters. I heartily suggest you
see this picture so you will fully understand why it will deservedly
receive multiple Academy Award nominations next January. Of the
movies released thus far in 2003, “Mystic River” is undoubtedly the
best picture of the year.
* VAN NOVACK, 50, is the director of institutional research at Cal
State Long Beach and lives in Huntington Beach with his wife
Elizabeth.
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