The director, Neil Jordan, wrote the script with Bruce Robinson (it’s based on Bari Wood’s novel Doll’s Eyes), and the plot creaks badly, especially in the last forty minutes, when the killer, up to now a shadowy half-presence, makes his way to the forefront of the movie. That he’s played by Robert Downey should help, but the role is so misconceived that even Downey can’t do much with it. But the movie transcends the dumbness of the narrative, because Jordan and his photographer, Darius Khondji, create extraordinary lyrical sequences that carry you along. The mysterious watery opening (which gets explained much later on), a flood set by human hands to make a reservoir, echoes when visions of Rebecca’s body being dragged out of seaweed-green water are the last thing Claire sees before crashing her car. Rebecca disappears after a school production of Snow White held outside, near some woods, and Jordan and Khondji give the production an enchanted look. (There’s even a white horse on hand.) When Claire rushes backstage to congratulate her, all she finds are Rebecca’s classmates, giggling and screaming, and a pair of fairy wings hung on the branch of a tree. From this scene through the attempted suicide, the movie has a hallucinatory feel and a disturbing, woebegone tone. Later there’s a scene where Claire’s dog whines for her beneath her bedroom window and she chases after it, onto the highway, so freaked out and so oblivious that she causes a pile-up. Jordan may not be able to control the narrative, but he’s completely in charge in these stinging, poetic waking-nightmare sequences. At its best, In Dreams is reminiscent of De Palma’s The Fury, with its operatic emotionalism and bravura thriller sequences stacked one on top of the other like a precarious, glittering tower you expect to tumble any minute. (Elliot Goldenthal’s eerie music is an effective component in Jordan’s mix.)
Aidan Quinn and Stephen Rea from In Dreams. |
When Jordan made The Crying Game, his biggest critical success, I thought he was stuck in a groove. He seemed to have only one story – about the man who falls for a woman but finds there’s an insuperable obstacle between them: in Mona Lisa she wants another woman, in The Miracle she turns out to be his mother, in The Crying Game she’s really a guy. He’d worn this narrative strategy down to its nub, and he couldn’t seem to find anything to replace it; neither Interview with a Vampire nor Michael Collins, his subsequent pictures, seemed to mean much to him – they were impersonal (if sometimes beautiful) pieces. The strange distance between the Coopers in In Dreams, attributable to an agony Paul can neither penetrate nor comprehend, revives Jordan’s obsession, but he juices it up, conveying it with a conviction that was lacking in The Crying Game. Jordan shifts all the variables this time by moving the haunted woman to the centre of the movie in place of the exasperated rejected man.
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