Film Review
Beginning as a fairly respectable homage to film noir and Hitchcock, this lightweight
American thriller soon becomes weighed down by its own pretensions and
it ends up as a rather ungainly mishmash of genres.
Adapted from
The Witnesses, a novel by Anne Holden,
The Bedroom Window
starts out well enough but fails to live up to its promise.
In the first half, which builds the suspense and noirish
atmosphere very competently, it is possible to overlook the film's faults - implausible
characterisation, phoney dialogue, and an uneven narrative style. This is not so
in the second half, where the plot becomes increasingly less credible, and ends up veering
all over the place like, a juggernaut out of control. The film ultimately resembles
a weak, disrespectful parody of the genre it begins by emulating so promisingly.
What just about saves the film and prevents it from appearing totally amateurish is its
relatively talented star actors who, whilst appearing miscast and clearly better than
the material they are saddled with, turn in some entertaining performances. Steve
Guttenberg makes an improbable hero (with more sex appeal than brains), assisted by a
gutsy tongue-in-cheek Elizabeth McGovern. French diva Isabelle Huppert
(
Madame Bovary (1991),
La Cérémonie (1995))
brings a touch of class to the film's first half, even if the character she is playing (a self-centred
femme fatale type) is just too mean and cold to be taken seriously.
© James Travers 2003
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Executive Terry Lambert soon begins to regret having an affair with his boss's wife, Sylvia.
One night, Sylvia witnesses an attempted rape through the bedroom window of Terry's apartment.
Terry misses seeing the attack but is keen to inform the authorities when he learns of
similar incidents in the area. As Sylvia is concerned about keeping her affair from
her husband, Terry decides to pretend it was he who witnessed the attack. The scheme
soon backfires and Terry finds himself being suspected of being the aggressor. His
only hope is to find the rapist and expose him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.