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Review by Jack Foley |
DVD FEATURES: Director's commentary; Trailer;Cast and crew biographies;
The Nature of Lantana.
RELATIONSHIPS take centre stage in Lantana, a psychological thriller about
love which has to rate as one of the finest movies of the year.
Starring Anthony LaPaglia, Geoffrey Rush and Barbara Hershey, this Altman-esque
Australian potboiler is a multi-layered and frequently pulsating journey through
four marriages, all of which seem unrelated at first, but which become drawn
into a tangled web of love, deceit, sex and death following the disappearance
of one woman.
Navigating his way through them is LaPaglias rough around the
edges Leon Zat, a violence-prone cop attempting to cope with a mid-life
crisis, who is having an affair (with Rachael Blakes far from plain
Jane!) and suffering from chest pains.
His wife, meanwhile (played by the beautiful Kerry Armstrong), is also suffering
from self-doubt and seeks solace in her dance lessons and in the sympathetic
ears of Hersheys tortured psychiatrist, a woman still coming to terms
with the death of her daughter and who is beginning to question the sexuality
of her own, distant husband (played by Rush).
Zats mistress, on the other hand, is having issues of her own, caught
between the need for some stability and her desire for Zat and, possibly,
the happily married bloke next door (Vince Colosimos Nik), who may,
in turn, know something about the corpse seen at the beginning of the movie
and which provides the catalyst for Zats journey of self-discovery.
Sound complicated? Well, it is credit to director Ray Lawrence that proceedings
never become too convoluted or contrived, as its tangled plot unfolds in a
way that constantly surprises and always grips.
The title of the movie takes its name from the opening image - that of a woman
caught within a twisted and entangled vine, a woman wearing a gold ring on
her finger, a married woman, who is trapped by the vine itself, with its twisted
branches covered in tiny thorns that could cut you to shreds, as well as lush
green leaves, colourful flowers and moments of exquisite beauty.
For Andrew Bovell, who wrote the screenplay, it provides a literal and
metaphoric resonance to the story, which, in turn, is about human
vulnerability and about people reaching a particular stage in their lives
when they need to question and re-examine how they are living, particularly
in the nature of love and relationships.
The movie itself was inspired by the stage version of Bovells own screenplay
- Speaking in Tongues - and was something which the writer admits to believing
might not work on film; yet the resulting picture won seven Australian Film
Institute Awards (including Best Film and Best Director) when it was released
last year. It is easy to see why.
Lantana
is a tough, uncompromising depiction of adult relationships, stripped bare,
that is under-pinned by some of the years grittiest performances. Rush
and Hershey, as we have come to expect, stand out, as do the likes of the
lesser-known Armstrong and Colosimo, but this is LaPaglias movie and
his raw portrayal of the reprehensible Zat is a revelation.
LaPaglia has made a career out of providing solid support in movies such as
The Client and Summer of Sam, but here produces a mesmerising star turn, which
is as honest and intense as it is conflicted and life-affirming.
High praise indeed, but with a film this good, it is easy to run out of superlatives.
RELATED STORIES: Click here
for a feature on the making of the movie...
Click here to read what the US critics
thought of the movie...
Click here to see where it featured
in our Top 10 of 2002...