FIREFLIES
IN THE GARDEN
By ALISSA SIMON
Variety, 2/11/08
A tragic
accident provides an excuse for a dysfunctional family to relive
past grudges and grievances in “Fireflies in the Garden,”
the writing-helming debut of Dennis Lee (known for his award-winning
short “Jesus Henry Christ”). Produced by an American
offshoot of Berlin-based Senator Entertainment, world preem in special
out-of-competition Berlin slot seems more than the off-key project
deserves. Despite the mega-wattage of pic’s starry cast, theatrical
prospects seem dim for this clumsy melodrama, which looks and sounds
no better than an average made-for-cabler. U.S. market potential
looks best in ancillary.
Set in an unnamed Midwestern suburb that the pic implies is near
Chicago (but filmed in Texas, so the landscape looks totally wrong),
the prologue introduces the Taylor family: emotionally abusive,
domineering father Charles (Willem Dafoe), a university professor
and struggling writer; perfect mother Lisa (Julia Roberts, showing
her past year’s pregnancy); and picked-on adolescent son Michael
(Cayden Boyd). Lisa’s sulky teen sister Jane (Hayden Panetierre)
joins the clan one summer and befriends downtrodden Michael.
Present-day story revolves around the same folks some 22 years later,
when the planned celebration of Lisa’s belated university
degree turns into a time of mourning. Michael (Ryan Reyolds) is
now a successful novelist married to an alcoholic, Kelly (Carrie-Anne
Moss).
Sister Ryne (Shannon Lucio), who was a mere bump in Lisa’s
belly, has just entered law school. Jane (Emily Watson) and hubby
Jimmy Lawrence (George Newbern) are, strangely, living in the old
Taylor home with precocious, baseball-loving kiddies Christopher
(Chase Ellison) and Leslie (Brooklyn Proulx).
Jumps between past and present aren’t always clearly signaled
(apart from car models, the production design and costumes look
the same) and the young actors bear little resemblance to their
adult counterparts. Adding to the confusion, Reynolds appears too
young for his character’s age.
Michael, who has never forgiven his father’s cruelties, has
just completed a roman a clef about the family’s troubled
past, “Fireflies in the Garden.” Title, also that of
a Robert Frost poem, cues memory of a time when young Michael embarrassed
Dad in front of colleagues by plagiarizing the poem, and was brutally
punished.
Not content with mere allusions (and exemplifying its subtlety level),
pic shows Michael and young cousins literally swatting at fireflies
with badminton rackets. But then, this is a family that considers
it fun to explode fish with firecrackers.
Apparently aspiring to the dark comedy of “Igby Goes Down,”
an earlier Senator production, Lee’s semi-autobiographical
script fails to sustain any tone convincingly. Dialogue lacks wit,
relying overmuch on vernacular (“It sucks” is a frequent
comment) and the F-word. False happy ending is in no way earned.
Perfs are all over the place, from Dafoe’s one-note monster
dad to Boyd’s simmering resentment. On the distaff side, Roberts
and Watson at least come off as warm mothers. Moss is a cipher treated
as a deus ex machina.
Flat lighting and wan lensing by Roberts’ husband, Danny Moder,
doesn’t do the actors any favors. Low-rent look of other tech
credits leads one to suspect the major portion of budget was spent
on the cast.
A Senator Entertainment production, in association
with Kulture Machine. (International sales: Essential Entertainment,
Los Angeles). Produced by Marco Weber, Vanessa Coifman, Sukee Chew.
Co-producer, Philip Rose. Executive producers, Jere Hausfater, Milton
Liu. Directed and written by Dennis Lee.
Lisa Taylor - Julia Roberts
Michael Taylor - Ryan Reynolds
Charles Taylor - Willem Dafoe
Jane Lawrence - Emily Watson
Kelly - Carrie-Anne Moss
Addison - Ioan Gruffudd
Young Jane - Hayden Panetierre
Young Michael - Cayden Boyd
Ryne Taylor - Shannon Lucio
Jimmy Lawrence - George Newbern
Christopher Lawrence - Chase Ellison
Leslie Lawrence - Brooklyn Proulx |