BOTTOM
LINE:
Intriguingly
dark film which gives you the chance to see Kevin Costner being
very bad for a change, but the film gets distracted too much by
Demi Moore's police/divorce B-story which takes too much screen
time away from the main event of watching Costner do his thing.
THE GOOD:
The idea of watching Kevin Costner in anything may
be a turn-off for some people but I looked forward to seeing him
take on a character such as Mr Brooks that was so different to anything
he's done before. It's made all the more creepy in that he has a
dialogue with William Hurt, the representation of Mr Brooks' evil
side who nobody ever sees. Their scenes are very effective and disturbing.
For the most part, William Hurt is the evil guy here with Kevin
Costner really just being the ordinary guy being pushed by his malevolent
alter-ego. The story of Mr Brooks reluctantly taking on an apprentice
is also a different take and quite twisted. However, what makes
it all worthwhile is the surprising twist towards the end of the
film which does not come out of nowhere and actually makes sense,
and it also gives Costner the opportunity to be the creepy one when
he turns on his apprentice. The odd thing in films such as this
is that you actually become sympathetic with the character's journey,
even one as troubled and mentally twisted as Mr Brooks. There's
also a disturbing link with his daughter who may have picked up
the serial-killer gene from her father.
THE BAD:
It's a shame that the filmmakers
chose to include a story that for the most part doesn't tie in well
with the Brooks storyline. The plot surrounding Demi Moore's tough
police woman on the hunt for the serial killer Mr Brooks on the
surface is tied in to the story, but for some reason, we get a whole
side-bar on her impending divorce and her daily life away from it.
This film was sold on the idea of watching Kevin Costner as a serial
killer so why don't we get to see that for the bulk of the time
we're watching the film? A little strange. It of course eventually
ties together, but not in any streamlined, efficient way. Not to
say Demi Moore is not very good here, but the script's structure
definitely needed to be fine tuned to tie this in better - that,
or an effective use of the scissors in the cutting room. As a result,
a lot of the tension evaporates out of the film. In short, a film
that should have been about 100 minutes long end up being 2+ hours
and for no good reason.