Director:
David Koepp
Starring:
Johnny Depp
John Turturro
Maria Bello
Timothy Hutton
Charles S. Dutton
Release: 12 Mar. 04
IMDb
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Secret Window
BY: DAVID PERRY
A writer’s loneliness can be a compelling theme, and Stanley
Kubrick previously proved that taking a mediocre Stephen King premise and
expanding on it can make the subject perfect for cinema. David Koepp tries
to do the same with King’s novella, Secret Windows, Secret Gardens, dropping
the second half of the title and likely any suspense previously present in
the source material.
I’m not a fan of King for the most part. Although I consider Misery a
masterpiece, most of his work has done little for me -- often I consider the
film variations on his stories to be superior. But at least he knows how to
get a jolt out of a reader, even if it’s unearned. There’s nothing
comparable in Secret Window, a film that piddles along at a pace form-fitted
for the audience to guess what will happen next. It’s concluding twist is
predictable by the end of the opening credits, which is terribly painful
when one considers that the actor whose time is wasted is Johnny Depp,
currently on top of his game.
Depp’s Mort Rainey is a proxy for King, a prolific pulp writer who is now
struggling to put together his next work. Questioned by a Mississippi hick
(John Turturro seems to be channeling Robert Mitchum in The Night of the Hunter
as an Amish scribe) who thinks Rainey plagiarized one of his short stories,
the pieces that make up the film’s puzzle become too easy to piece together.
As a commentary on Richard Bachman, this film might have had some teeth, but
nothing it says means much more than a director’s failed attempts to create
tension. Certainly, there’s not enough here to believe the original story is
near the magnificence of Misery, which is a book that kicks the ass of its
especially well-made film adaptation, but one cannot help but feel that Koepp is bastardizing a marginal, but respectable novella. Depp only serves
to remind the audience that there once was something to the project that
drew him to the character, even if it’s lost in Koepp’s mess.
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