Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
Donate to Christianity Today
November 22, 2009
Free Newsletters:
RSS Feeds | Audio | Twitter

Home > Movies > Reviews > 2004 |  
The Clearing
| posted 7/02/2004




The Clearing

Our rating: 2 Stars - Fair

Rate this movie  

MPAA rating: R
(for brief strong language)



Theater release:
July 02, 2004
by Fox Searchlight Pictures

Directed by: Pieter Jan Brugge

Runtime: 1 hour 31 minutes

Cast: Robert Redford (Wayne Hayes), Helen Mirren (Eileen Hayes), Willem Dafoe (Arnold Mack), Alessandro Nivola (Tim Hayes), Melissa Sagemiller (Jill Hayes), Matt Craven (Agent Ray Fuller)

Related: Talk About It/Family Corner




Buy this poster

The Clearing starts out like a thriller, but it is far from thrilling. Pieter Jan Brugge's directorial debut is watchable only for its talented cast, a trio of formidable actors who make you wonder what drew them to this particular script. It's a kidnapping yarn that raises a lot of interesting questions and suggests myriad possibilities for conspiracy and surprise, only to cast off those concerns entirely. It ends by slumping into the territory of simple morality plays—you know the kind, where the captive rich man suddenly learns that a few of his priorities are out of whack.

Robert Redford is kidnap victim Wayne Hayes
Robert Redford is kidnap victim Wayne Hayes

Brugge, who served as producer for Michael Mann's edgy thrillers The Insider and Heat, deals with some heavy ethical concerns here, and he's got a lineup of seasoned actors who make the most of uncomfortable silences and emotional outbursts. But the script by newcomer Justin Haythe feels like a rough draft. The characters lack distinctive voices, fitting the typical clichés of the rich businessman (Robert Redford, Spy Game), the businessman's imperious wife (Helen Mirren of Gosford Park), and the grudge-bearing ex-employee (Willem Dafoe, Spider-Man).

It is difficult to discuss the plot without "spoiling" what few pedestrian "surprises" it bears—but here is a restrained summary: Wealthy car-rental-business pioneer Wayne Hayes is kidnapped from the driveway of his suburban Pittsburgh home by an amateur criminal named Arnold, leaving his resourceful homemaker wife Eileen to fret over the crisis. The grown children (Alessandro Nivolo and Melissa Sagemiller) come home to furrow their brows over the scarcity of clues, and an FBI agent (Mike Pniewski) moves in to enjoy Eileen's hospitality and muse over the identity of the kidnapper. Meanwhile, Wayne is forced to trudge hand-cuffed through rugged, rainy, forested terrain with his captor's gun aimed at his spine. Arnold tells him there's a cabin ahead, and that he'll be handed over to a band of crooks who have hired him for the delivery.

Willem Dafoe plays the bad guy, Arnold Mack
Willem Dafoe plays the bad guy, Arnold Mack

The revelation that the dour, disgruntled Arnold once worked for Wayne comes early, so that's hardly a spoiler. The biggest surprise is just how many interesting directions the storyteller refuses to go with his plot, preferring a simple and, frankly, dull series of conversations that lead to a rather bewildering outcome. Haythe's idea of an exciting outburst runs like this: "I listened to you, g------ it! Now you listen to me!"

By its conclusion, it has morphed from uninspired thriller into ponderous drama, but the dialogue-heavy scenes both in the woods and on the home front are plodding and even wearying. It would be a complete waste of time if the actors did not bring some intriguing subtleties to their roles. But as it is, even Mirren's magisterial gravitas, Redford's slow-burn intensity, and the unnverving complexities of Dafoe cannot get a fire going in this cliché-soggy kindling.

This kind of sub-level drama is the sort of thing that works in the hands of a subversive master like Roman Polanski. He did just that with a simple kidnapping yarn called Frantic, the 1988 Harrison Ford mystery in which a husband goes hunting for his kidnapped wife. After stumbling into a dark and wicked Paris underworld, Ford's character emerged a changed man, and thus what might have been a happy ending was instead marked by a discomforting chill.

Helen Mirren plays Wayne's wife Eileen
Helen Mirren plays Wayne's wife Eileen

Brugge doesn't come anywhere close to such intriguing explorations. He teases us with typical thriller conventions—like the photographs of an innocent who doesn't know she's being watched, the wife's discovery of her husband's secret life, and the package from the kidnapper that holds a nasty surprise. There's a burst of adrenalin late in the film when Eileen takes matters into her own hands, plunging into darkness to save her spouse. But these too lead to anticlimactic ends. You keep wishing Helen Mirren would transform into her Prime Suspect character, Detective Chief Inspector Jane Tennyson, track down the villain and disintegrate him with her famously contemptuous scowl.




E-mail this pageWrite CTPrint this articlePost a comment





  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders2-for-1 Gifts!

[Reader Reviews]
Average User Rating: Not rated

The allotted time for commenting has ended.

sponsors 








[Browse More Christianity Today]

Search

























Search by Name
Or use Advanced Search to search by program, region, cost, affiliation, enrollment, more!

Search by:





Books & Culture
Christianity Today
Church Law & Tax Report
Church Finance Today
Leadership Journal
Men of Integrity
Outcomes
Kyria.com
Your Church
ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
PreachingToday.com