[rec.arts.movies.reviews] REVIEW: COUSINS

nw@uts.amdahl.com (Neal Weidenhofer) (06/15/89)

				    COUSINS
		       A film review by Neal Weidenhofer
			Copyright 1989 Neal Weidenhofer

     Well, I just saw the best film I've seen in a LONG time and since I've not
seen it mentioned here, I'll pass on my impressions.  I'm giving it a good
solid +3 on the -4 to +4 scale.  The name of this marvel is COUSINS and I wish
I had seen it when it first came out so I could have gone back tonight instead
of seeing it for the first time.

     The key word to describe this movie is "pure."  In the first place, it's a
pure romance--it even has a happy ending--which works.  The characters are also
pure in the sense of being archetypes.

     First we have our hero, a pure romantic whose father says he "failed at
everything except life."  The horrendous miscasting that gave this role to Ted
Danson is the only factor that keeps this from being a +4 movie.  I liked
CHEERS and I can even tolerate some of his other movies but a romantic lead in
a role that requires a modicum of sensitivity and depth--not a chance.

     Next comes the leading lady magnificently played by Isabelle Rossallini
(who almost makes up for Danson.)  She is a pure "good woman" who is ready to
abandon her own happiness because her husband and daughter need her.  Inside
her is another pure romantic trying to get out.

     Married to them are Sean Young playing a purely vapid career girl who
doesn't have a clue what she wants out of life and William Petersen, the purest
*ssh*le it's been my pleasure to watch in as long as I can remember.  Got a
problem?  Use your fists.

     And last but not by a damn sight least is Lloyd Bridges playing the most
delightfully pure dirty old man I have ever seen.  Would *your* grandfather
share his porno magazines with *you*?

     It's the screenplay though that makes this movie a pure delight.  It's a
purely brilliant adaptation of COUSIN, COUSINE--almost a pure translation.  A
very witty story of two people whose spouses are having an affair and begin
seeing each other, purely as friends, for consolation and a certain amount of
revenge and end up, almost against their wills, actually falling in love.

     Mix these ingredients with direction that's adequate with occasional
flashes of brilliance and camera work that includes some truly awesome Canadian
scenery and you get a movie that's bound to appeal to the pure romantic in you.
Take him or her to see it.

				Neal Weidenhofer
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