Catwoman
by Victoria Alexander
CATWOMAN’S director, Pitof, is very talented. He certainly gave
the film an interesting look. But the story is old and trite. Haven’t
we seen this cosmetic-as-evil-killer tale a hundred times before?
Hey, wasn’t there a similar story in a BATMAN movie?
Patience
Philips (Halle Berry) is a bullied graphics artist who wears the
same crummy clothes every day. The big company she works for, Hedare
Beauty, is run by creamy arch-villain George Hedare (Lambert Wilson)
and his discarded wife Laurel (Sharon Stone). She is forty years
old and no longer the face of the cosmetics company. She is bitter
and a real drama queen. She poses. Laurel is such an egomaniac that
anyone would hate her. I actually sympathized with her rude, *****
of a husband. Together they have created an anti-aging cream, Beau-line,
that must be used every day or your face rots. (So? What’s
the problem? People, it stops the aging process! That’s worth
a few severe headaches now and then!) Patience stumbles on the negative
side-effects (you can’t quit using the product or else) and
is murdered, only to be reborn as Catwoman through the interference
of an Egyptian cat named Midnight who has special powers. There
have been others. They are all over but there is no sisterhood.
All
this cat history is explained to Patience by cat lady Ophelia (Frances
Conroy). I wanted to shove a hairball down her throat.
Wouldn’t
it have been fun if Laurel Hedare turned out to be AlleyCat Woman?
Catwoman
has a distinct personality from Patience. She’s a strutting
hellcat! She’s a kitten with a whip! She pounces, she purrs,
she hisses. She leaps and she steals. She doesn’t regally
lounge around or spends hours licking herself. She wouldn’t
follow anyone home who has a treat for her.
Screenwriters
John Brancato and Mike Ferris just could not make viable characters
out of Patience or Catwoman. Patience is your typical oppressed
worker-bee who is clumsy and, even though gorgeous, doesn’t
have a love life and doesn’t know she is gorgeous. Like all
beautiful movie stars playing frumpy characters who will change,
Patience has a fat friend, Sally (Alex Borstein). Catwoman is ridiculous.
That mask is awful and Patience’s hair, once she becomes Catwoman,
was distractingly hideous.
I became
fixated on the mess on top of Catwoman’s head and Laurel’s
Johnny Rotten platinum hairdo.
Brancato
and Ferris and Pitof have a much better handle on the complicated
Laurel. The screenwriters give her one memorable line spoken to
Catwoman: “I’m used to doing all kinds of things I don’t
want to do.”
Of
course a handsome hunk of a police detective, Tom Lone (Benjamin
Bratt), falls in love with Patience. By the way, after Patience
is fired, how does she pay her rent? When the detective tussles
with Catwoman, he has no idea that the black woman in a skimpy S&M
outfit and a silly mask with pointy ears is really his girlfriend
Patience. He’s not too smart. I guess the red lipstick fooled
him.
Well,
we all grew up with Superman’s disguise (a pair of glasses)
shielding his true identity.
This
is a big misstep blamed squarely on the writers. Couldn’t
they have made Catwoman more tormented? If you were to suddenly
wake up a different person, wouldn’t you be groping around
trying to come to terms with your new preferences and skills? Would
you still have the same thoughts as the previous you?
The
CGI sequences are not very good, with Catwoman leaping around like
a sick bug. But I did like the ending because, as you know, cats
are fickle creatures. They are not loyal.
Final
word? Halle Berry has retired Catwoman as a franchise.
Ever
wonder why Sharon Stone doesn’t make many movies any more?
The website, thesmokinggun.com, has her “perk” list
for the proposed BASIC INSTINCT 2. Here are just some of the perks.
Her adopted toddler son must have 3 nannies (at $1500 per week per
nanny). Stone wanted Pilates equipment, a $3500/week per diem, armed
bodyguards, no on-set cigar smoking, a chauffeured car with a non-smoking
driver approved by Stone, and a convertible sedan for her personal
use. Also, two assistants, cell phones, pagers, presidential suite,
first-class travel (if a private jet is unavailable), chef, and
a deluxe motor home with air conditioning, heating, bed, private
bathroom, shower, TV, VCR, refrigerator, telephone, stove, couch,
stereo, and cellular fax machine. Stone is to keep all wardrobe
and jewelry worn in the movie.
Thank
goodness we will never see Sharon Stone working in independent films
purely for the love of her craft.
Stone
has a really gorgeous wardrobe in CATWOMAN which is probably now
in her closet. (I love that giant Hermes bag!) While Stone has a
good lawyer, might I suggest a further demand? Stone’s next
contract should stipulate that anything Stone touches goes home
with her.
CATWOMAN
United States, 2004
U.S. Release Date: 7/23/04 (wide)
Running Length: 1:44
MPAA Classification: PG-13 (Violence, S&M gear)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Cast: Halle Berry, Benjamin Bratt, Sharon Stone, Lambert Wilson,
Frances Conroy, Alex Borstein
Director: Pitof
Producers: Denise Di Novi, Edward McDonnell
Screenplay: John Brancato & Michael Ferris and John Rogers,
based on characters created by Bob Kane
Cinematography: Thierry Arbogast
Music: Klaus Badelt
U.S. Distributor: Warner Brothers
by
Victoria Alexander - FilmsInReview.com
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