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Good Acting Can’t Save The Air I Breathe
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Good Acting Can’t Save The Air I Breathe
By Annabelle Robertson
Crosswalk.com Contributing Writer

DVD Release Date:  May 27, 2008

Theatrical Release Date:  January 25, 2008

Rating:  R (for violence, language and some sexual content/nudity)

Genre:  Drama/Thriller

Run Time:  95 min.

Director:  Jieho Lee

Actors:  Kevin Bacon, Julie Delpy, Brendan Fraser, Andy Garcia, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Emile Hirsch, Forest Whitaker

Happiness, pleasure, sorrow, love—according an ancient Chinese proverb, these are the tenets of a full live, and without them, we will never be complete.  In service of this belief, novice screenwriter-director Jieho Lee has created four stories, interwoven Robert Altman style, to represent each one.

Forest Whitaker is Happiness, a clerk whose life ticks by, one day at a time, without any joy or meaning.  In search of something, he knows not what, he takes out a bookie loan and bets on a losing horse, after overhearing a tip.  He ends up paying a heavy price for his folly, laughing his head off in a moment of great crime and tragedy.  Happiness.

Brendan Fraser is Pleasure, a hit man with a childhood trauma and a periodic conscience.  He works for “Fingers,” a mobster played by Andy Garcia.  Fingers earned his nickname by cutting off other people’s digits, and he does this (or threatens to do it) throughout the film.  This is just one kind of the disturbing, brutal violence featured in the film.  These savage acts are often unexpected as well, even though they are cliché.  Weak stomachs beware.  Pleasure.

Sarah Michelle Gellar is Sorrow.  A Britney-like pop star, she finds herself at the mercy of Fingers, after her manager embezzles all her funds and “gives” Sorrow to Fingers as payment.  Fingers is not an easy boss.  He’s even less so when she gets involved with one of his men.  Sorrow.

Kevin Bacon is Love.  In love with his best friend’s wife (Julie Delpy), he’ll do anything to save her life, after an accident which leaves her in want of a blood transfusion for her very rare blood type.  Love.

These characters eventually meet or cross paths, directly or indirectly, and the decisions they all make affect one another with varying outcomes.  It’s not clear what message the Korean-American Lee is hoping to send with this hodgepodge of a story, however.  It’s dark, depressing and extremely violent, with little redemption in the end.  Nihilism seems to be the dominant worldview, with strong synchronistic overtones.  We are all one, Lee seems to be saying, and at one with one another as well.  Fleeting moments of pleasure with other people are, in fact, the only hope we have in this lonely, gloomy world.

Content Provided by: http://www.crosswalk.com

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