Inverse (2014)

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Inverse: Directed by Matt Duggan. With Josh Wingate, Michelle Lawrence, Morlan Higgins, Chris Pauley. A man awakens from his supposed death to discover that he’s from a parallel universe. He’s fallen in love with his doppelganger’s wife here on Earth, which sets off a chain of events that threaten both their lives and mankind.

“Meg Ryan gives what may well be the breakthrough performance of her career in u0026#39;In the Cut,u0026#39; a violent, erotic thriller from maverick filmmaker Jane Campion. Ryan plays Frannie, a college English instructor who is instinctively drawn to the seamier side of life. When women in her Manhattan neighborhood start falling victim to a grizzly serial killer, Frannie, as a possible witness, becomes a prime source of interest, both professionally and personally, for a homicide detective named Malloy, who has some troubling sexual proclivities of his own to deal with. Attracted by his edgy darkness and smoldering sexuality, Frannie succumbs to his advances, fully cognizant of the possible danger he represents. Is the law enforcement official as much of a threat to this young woman as the psychopath going about town decapitating and dismembering the local ladies? It is this kind of moral ambiguity that informs the entire movie.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eFrom the very outset, Campion makes it clear that we are not in for a conventional police procedural. She is obviously more interested in character and mood than in the niceties of a well-oiled plot and streamlined exposition. Frannie is far from being the helpless victim or plucky heroine one usually finds at the center of such tales; she is a complex, moody, taciturn woman who seems to be drifting passively through life, with little passion, conviction or purpose to make any of it worthwhile. Even when it comes to her sexual obsessions, it often feels as if she is just going through the motions. It is hard for us to get a bead on her, for she is a perfect reflection of the world she inhabits, a world without a clear moral compass – so much so that we often donu0026#39;t know what we are supposed to think of her or the other people with whom she comes in contact. The script plays up the sense of dislocation by having characters appear and disappear seemingly at random throughout the movie, sometimes serving as little more than red herrings for both the story and Frannieu0026#39;s life. This often makes it so that we in the audience feel clueless as to where exactly the film is headed and what the overall purpose of it really is. Itu0026#39;s often hard for us to get our bearings, yet, it is this very ambiguity, this sense of being rudderless and confused, that lifts the film above the tired conventions of the genre. In fact, the film is at its weakest when it concentrates on the intricacies of the plot – the resolution is remarkably mundane – and at its strongest when it merely records the eccentricities and passions of its two enigmatic characters.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe sexual content of the film is highly charged but not overtly offensive, with one glaring exception, at least in the u0026#39;unratedu0026#39; version (I assume this does not apply to the version released to theaters). Early in the film, we are treated to a graphic, hard core close-up of an act of fellatio that clearly is not simulated. Consider yourself forewarned.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eRyan has never been better than she is here. She plays Frannie almost as if she were one of the urban walking dead, just right for a modern woman who feels no real emotional connection with the world and the people around her.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eMark Ruffalo is excellent as the cop who may be more of a threat to Frannie than the killer whou0026#39;s terrorizing the area. Almost as an afterthought, Kevin Bacon makes little more than a cameo appearance, overacting in the role of Frannieu0026#39;s stalker ex-boyfriend. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu0026#39;In the Cutu0026#39; is a subtle little mood piece that is more about observing behavior than it is about searching for a killer. Those looking for an intensely plotted thriller may not be as intrigued by this film as those searching for a psychosexual character study. Itu0026#39;s the atmosphere and the performances that count in this film.”

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