As
much as I am an unapologetic romantic and can happily sigh my way through some
great romance movies (see posts Dream a Little and Love in all its Strangeness in this blog), my admiration as a cinephile tends to be
stronger towards those movies that are able to capture the reality of a relationship
or a marriage gone awry, since they respond more accurately to reality than
those that capture our first endorphinous associations. Painful as they are to
watch, movies like Ingmar Bergman’s Scenes
from a Marriage (1973), Mike Nichol’s Whose
Afraid of Virginia Wolff (1966) or Heartburn
(1986), and, even more recently, Noah
Baumbach’s The Squid and the Whale
(2005), Derek Cianfrance’s Blue Valentine
(2010), or Richard Linklater’s Boyhood
(2014), impress and certainly explain the statistics of divorce.
Yes,
sadly, love fades. Can it fade, however, to the point that one spouse isn’t
content with just the legal end of a relationship and wishes to use the till death do us part vow as an early
get out of marriage free card? These are the thriller marriage-gone-oh-so-wrong
movies and they are quite the fascinating ones to watch, as can be attested by
the close to 95 million dollars that David Fincher’s movie Gone Girl has made at the US box office in a mere two weeks.
Rosamund Pike as Amy Dunne in Gone Girl |
Gone Girl joins a very fascinating group of
thrillers that take us into this world of spouses plotting to kill their
spouse, and no spoiler alert as to if they succeed or not. Alfred Hitchcock’s
Dial M for Murder (1954) brought the
beautiful Grace Kelly and the very talented Ray Milland into an excellent
theatrical experience as this ex-tennis pro carries out a plot to murder his
wife. The movie was remade in 1998 by director Andrew Davis, this time called A Perfect Murder and starring Gwyneth
Paltrow, Viggo Mortensen and Michael Douglas; though a little less theatrical,
quite equally captivating. Interestingly, Davis also directed The Fugitive (1993) in which Harrison
Ford acts as the doctor accused of his wife’s murder. Ford seems to have acted
in his share of whodunit-killed-the-spouse movies, which besides The Fugitive, also includes Allan J.
Pakula’s Presumed Innocent (1990) and
Roman Polanski’s Frantic (1988).
Australian director Bruce Beresford took his hand at the topic directing Tommy
Lee Jones and Ashley Judd in Double
Jeopardy (1999), an intelligent thriller about a woman accused of murdering
her husband. I could go on, but back to the most recent marriage-gone-twisted thriller.
Kim Dickens as Detective Rhonda Boney in Gone Girl |
Gone Girl is a great addition to this
sub-genre. The movie tells the story of a man whose wife disappears in what
appears to be a violent manner and he slowly becomes the spotlight of a media
circus that begins to question his innocence. The movie is captivating and
flows tremendously well. Most certainly one of the advantages that Fincher has
here is that Gillian Flynn, the author of the novel on which the movie is
based, was the screenwriter . She is faithful to a fault to
her book. The casting has also been phenomenal. As much as Ben Affleck plays
Nick Dunne with wondrous subtleness, Rosamund Pike plays Amy Dunne with the unsettling
flair with which Kathy Bates played Annie Wilkes in Misery or Anthony Perkins played Norman Bates in Psycho, which is to say she is chillingly
great! Carrie Coon as Margo Dunne and Kim Dickens as Detective Rhonda Boney come alive even stronger than in the novel. This is an actors’ movie, without a doubt. Not to say that Fincher’s
directing isn’t good, but it is the actors that make it a little more than
that. The movie feels very much, in mood and tinting, like Fincher’s previous
one The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, and
both clearly solidify his work as a director of thrillers, adding Gone Girl to The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Seven and Zodiac.
Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike in Gone Girl |
Movies
like Gone Girls and others of this type are ultimately nothing else than very warped and upturned
romances; what makes them such entrancing thrillers to watch is, ultimately,
that the love and passion that once was is no more; sort of like those lines in
Pablo Neruda’s poem “If you Forget Me”:
Ahora
bien,
si
poco a poco dejas de quererme
dejaré
de quererte poco a poco.
Well, now,
If Little by Little you stop loving me
I shall stop loving you little by
little.