Friday, June 16, 2006
THE LAKE HOUSE
STARS: Keanu Reeves, Sandra Bullock, Christopher Plummer, Shohreh Agdashloo, Dylan Walsh, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Willeke van Ammelrooy
WRITER: David Auburn, based on the motion picture IL MARE
DIRECTOR: Alejandro Agresti

RATING: PG
DISTRIBUTOR: Warner Bros

The premise for THE LAKE HOUSE sounds so resolutely uncinematic that it’s rather remarkable how well it actually works. Doctor Kate Forster (Sandra Bullock), on moving out of the Illinois lake house she has loved into Chicago, leaves a letter for the next tenant, asking that any stray mail be forwarded. Kate briefly describes a few details of the lake house. When architect Alex Wyler (Keanu Reeves) moves in, he’s a bit puzzled, because the details don’t exist until they occur as he watches. After a bit of bemused correspondence back and forth, it becomes increasingly clear to both of them that – incredible as it may seem – Alex is in 2004, while Kate is in 2006.

While a description of how the characters come to this realization would sound convoluted, screenwriter David Auburn, adapting the Korean film IL MARE, does a graceful and succinct job of handling the supernatural plot twist, allowing the characters the right balance of astonishment and fascination that gradually (at just the right pace) gives way to romantic attraction over a distance. The storyline is crafted very well, letting us get to know the characters and the people in their lives with just enough emphasis to make us care without lingering too long in any one period. The narrative also cleverly brings Kate and Alex together for us so that we can root for the relationship as a real thing, rather than as an abstraction. There’s also joy in nuances, including a speech by Christopher Plummer as Alex’s master architect father about the quality of light that serves as an unforced metaphor for many of the film’s themes as well.

Director Alejandro Agresti gets beguiling chemistry out of leads Reeves and Bullock, who demonstrate that they don’t need a speeding bus to bring out the best in each other. Reeves’ slightly hesitant manner – as though he’s watching and waiting to determine when he ought to step up – is ideal for a man who finds his greatest emotional fulfillment in an odd form of long-distance romance, while Bullock tamps down her usual ebullience to strong effect, still vibrant but with a lived-in quality that suits Kate very well.

Agresti and production designer Nathan Crowley have come up with a stunning title element – the lake house is so incredible-looking that we can just about take in stride that it has its own magic.

On the upside, the plot doesn’t go where we might imagine it’s going. On the downside, the story eventually encompasses one of those time-warp paradoxes that would cause STAR TREK characters to reach for Excedrin. If one can get past this, THE LAKE HOUSE is a pleasing diversion.

source:www.ifmagazine.com - ABBIE BERNSTEIN
posted by Unknown @ 10:01 AM  
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