☆ ☆ ☆
Fracture (2007) – G. Hoblit
Anthony Hopkins works
a lot but his projects seem to be all over the place. In this one, he’s back to evil-genius mode,
not quite Hannibal Lecter but smart enough to outwit the legal system after
killing his wife and clearly enjoying tormenting public prosecutor Ryan Gosling
with taunts and head games. The internet recommended this as a twisty legal
thriller (one that I had somehow missed) but as directed by Gregory Hoblit (who
got his start with Hill Street Blues), it feels rather passé or cliché. This might be due to the music (too familiar)
or cinematography (too slick) or sets (too boring, despite what is supposed to
be amazing architecture or engineering delights). There might actually be a clever script under
there but that too feels very pat by the end. Critic Jonathan Rosenbaum (of the
Chicago Reader, back in the day) saw this as an interesting duel between
Hopkins’ classical acting style and Gosling’s method approach. Perhaps. Gosling is supposed to be cocky then contrite
but I’m not sure he pulls it off.
Hopkins is a little more subdued than I would have expected for this part. So there – average at best.

No comments:
Post a Comment