BOTTOM
LINE:
Despite
the stellar cast and moving visuals, this film is a waste of a good
idea, poorly directed and is nothing short of disappointing.
THE
GOOD: "Evening"
has a lot of good building blocks to make an excellent film. The
first is the idea itself; seguing between Ann Grant's past and present
life where as an old woman she re-lives her past through a crucial
point in her life surrounding a man named Harris who seems to grab
the attention of everyone he comes in to contact with. Through this
she lives out her brief affair with the man and how that impacts
on her best friend who is in love with Harris but about to get married
to someone else and how that impacts on that relationship. This
is then juxtaposed with the present where she is an old woman on
the verge of death and her two daughters (Toni Collette and Natasha
Richardson) are also facing problems of their own and look to their
mother for advice. The main theme of the film is that 'there is
no such thing as a mistake, only experiences.' Through this, all
of the characters are supposed to go through the journey of learning
this lesson. "Evening" also has a stellar cast, which
also includes Meryl Streep and Glenn Close. You would think with
all that talent on offer and a strong core theme you would get a
great film, but despite some very moving, colourful images....
THE
BAD: The
script and direction of this film is decidedly confused and just outright
poor. You can see the filmmakers were trying to get you swept up in
to the dramas and lives of these women but you walk out without caring
less about what happens to them when you know if it was done properly
you would have cared. A lot of the problem stems from the poorly structured
script which doesn't allow for the relationships to develop but rather
arbitrarily moves the characters from one point to the next. You don't
really see why Claire Danes would fall in love with or even be interested
in Harris until the nanosecond before they get started. And then she
turns on her own boyfriend suddenly (her best friend's brother) and
tells him to grow up and do it without her; he deserves it but it's
done without any build-up or obvious previous signs from Claire Danes'
character. The pay-offs are right but there are no setups leaving
you wondering, "where the hell did that come from?". The
ultimate occurs when the said boyfriend gets runover by a car and
dies, but it's done in a kind of arty way and we don't know who did
it or even if it was intentional. Also, Claire Danes seems to be trying
too hard, coming across quite unnatural and flat in her acting and
since the film is by and large resting on her shoulders, it really
does break the film if she's not carrying it (but then she didn't
have anything to work with so probably not her fault). All in all,
it's a big mess and as a result, you come away laughing unintentionally
in a lot of scenes which are meant to be the most moving.