Photo
Opportunity
Mark Romanek makes a great bad man of Robin.
When Robin Williams was America's favorite
funnyman in films like Mrs. Doubtfire,
it always felt a little strange admitting that the guy seemed kinda creepy.
When he "got serious" in irritating tearjerkers like Hook and What Dreams May Come, it was certainly in vogue to proclaim him
annoying, but few people seemed to admit that there was a potentially scary
vibe to him in many of those roles. Maybe it was the knowledge that he was clearly
repressing his natural hyperactive self, or that weird little grin he would
make right before the tears would flow, but in such parts he came across less
as benevolently bereaved and more as a potential psychopath, his vaguely
repressive meekness resembling that of the archetypal serial killer who,
neighbors later recall, seemed like such a nice, normal guy. When, oh when
would someone else see this potential in him and finally cast him as the creep
he was born to play?
It's done, and as photo developer
The name "
As anyone who's ever worked in a similar job
knows, there's lots of down time in which to gossip, daydream and generally
talk about what great things you could otherwise do. In Sy's case, that
involves imagining himself as a member of the Yorkin (read: "your
kin") family, whose matriarch, Nina (Mission
to Mars and Gladiator's Connie
Nielsen, finally in a good movie), regularly drops off their family snapshots.
There doesn't appear to be anything sexual about Sy's fixation, except perhaps
on the most sublimated of levels. He merely wants to be perceived as
"Uncle Sy" to Nina's son Jake (newcomer Dylan Smith).
Nothing too unusual there -- many families refer
to their extended circle of friends as uncles and aunts. Only Sy's a little too
friendly. Follow-you-home-when-you're-not-looking kind of
friendly. Obsessive, also: Since the Yorkins first started developing
photos at the SavMart, Sy's been saving duplicate prints for himself, which he
pastes into a giant collage on a large, otherwise empty wall in his apartment.
So, when the family threatens to reveal itself to him as not so perfect,
something's going to give, and the pent-up repression so apparent in Williams'
face might just explode.
The movie's all Williams' show, as are most
movies he stars in, but director Mark Romanek, best known for Nine Inch Nails'
"Closer" video, makes the sets the star as well, from the antiseptic
SavMart to Sy's empty apartment (way too large to be affordable on a
discount-store salary, but you roll with it because it's symbolic of his empty
life). Romanek even manages to get perhaps the creepiest shot ever of someone
ascending an escalator, though due credit should also go to cinematographer
Jeff Cronenweth of Fight Club, a
movie as grungy as this is sterile; and composers Reinhold Heil and Johnny
Klimek, who've scored all of Tom Tykwer's films. In an age of bombastic
symphonic scores, theirs is modern and freaky, yet unintrusive.
For those disappointed with Williams' other
psycho turns this year, in the cluttered Death
to Smoochy and low-payoff Insomnia, fear not: This is the one to see. Some may be
disappointed in the film's ambiguous ending, but the more you think about it,
the less of a cheat it feels, especially when one considers how cut and dried a
studio would have forced it to be based on test scores from 15-year-old boys. One Hour Photo may be too
"indie" to earn Williams another Oscar, but his ill will hunting
should stick with you much longer than anything in that old Matt Damon movie.