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Lost in the Swamp

This is some damn fine coffee you got here in Twin Peaks. And some damn good cherry pie. But I have to tell you something, sheriff: Last night, I had a dream in which a dancing midget talked backward, thus leading me to believe that our killer is a man...
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This is some damn fine coffee you got here in Twin Peaks. And some damn good cherry pie. But I have to tell you something, sheriff: Last night, I had a dream in which a dancing midget talked backward, thus leading me to believe that our killer is a man with long hair..."

Sorry -- wrong movie. But the confusion is understandable. Once you've seen one deranged auteur's vision of a small town in which a local slut is found dead in the water and the police try to use psychic powers to find the killer, it's hard to tell the others apart. Sam Raimi's The Gift is a great deal shorter than Twin Peaks, and it's also less whimsical. To say it's less original is a no-brainer. In addition to evoking David Lynch, it gives you the distinct feeling -- call it a sixth sense -- that there's an unbreakable resemblance to the work of another director of creepy movies, from the myriad psychic premonitions (and visions of dead people) to a surprise twist that's part of the ending. Similarities to Unbreakable are probably an unfortunate coincidence, although a case could be made that both movies draw strongly upon David Cronenberg's The Dead Zone.

While it's good to see Raimi returning to the field of scary movies after his forgettable Kevin Costner baseball effort (For Love of the Game) last year, it's a shame he chose a project so predictable. The man whose breakthrough movie, The Evil Dead, was subtitled "the ultimate experience in grueling horror" now resorts to the cheapest scare tactic in the book: lowering the soundtrack's volume to almost nothing, then jolting a really loud noise out of nowhere, even though it may not correspond to anything on the screen.

However, cheap and unoriginal as The Gift may be, it sucks you in. As a mainstream Hollywood film, it would be moderately impressive; only because it's a Raimi film that hopes to qualify for an Oscar do we expect more than two hours of unmotivated shocks. Viewers simply looking for a date movie should look no further -- if you have a timid girlfriend, she'll be jumping into your arms by the end. Those looking for Evil Dead IV, or even A Simple Plan II, should keep looking.

The setting for The Gift is the sleepy Georgia town of Brixton, conveniently located next to a really creepy swamp. Most of the townspeople look like movie stars and have generic, non-region-specific Southern accents. It's the kind of town where squirrel hunting is a popular pastime, and cops argue about whether or not there was an "e-clair" in the box of doughnuts just a few minutes ago. The "gift" in question is the unpredictable psychic power possessed by Annie Wilson (Cate Blanchett), a power that usually induces violent visions and nightmares whenever something bad is about to happen. (Given that Raimi's next film will be about a well-known arachnid superhero, it's tempting to call this ability a "spider sense.")

Annie's been a widow ever since she failed to convince her husband that a psychic warning was for real. She is raising her three kids on welfare checks and the occasional psychic readings she does for local townsfolk, among them Valerie Barksdale (Hilary Swank), a local woman who regularly bears new signs of abuse by her vicious redneck husband, Donnie (Keanu Reeves, looking awake for once). Annie may be psychic, but her plain old intuition isn't so great -- it never occurs to her that telling Valerie to leave her husband may bring about dangerous repercussions. Nor does she realize that she's shutting her eldest son out of her life, despite attempts at caring intervention from his nice-guy teacher, Wayne (Greg Kinnear).

Some visions of horror later, Wayne's gorgeous, half-his-age fiancée, Jessica (Katie Holmes), turns up dead in a lake, and the question becomes: whodunnit? Donnie is homicidal and threatens everyone he encounters, so he is far too obvious a choice. Could it have been Valerie? Wayne? The schizophrenic mechanic (Giovanni Ribisi, outshining all other actors herein) who considers Annie his only friend? Raimi regular Gary Cole, playing yet another menacing authority figure? Jessica's rich dad? Donnie's corrupt local cop buddy?

Sad to say, the answer will probably be obvious to discerning audience members early on, despite a couple of red herrings thrown the viewer's way. Nonetheless, the story is superficially entertaining enough to keep you watching, and there are occasional scenes of disturbing power, including one in which a man is tied to a chair and burned alive. Blanchett and Ribisi are the standouts in the cast, with Reeves doing okay (he'll never pass for Southern, but at least he's suitably menacing); Kinnear and Holmes fare less well, though the latter does show her breasts, which is probably all her fans want to see, anyway. Swank, in her first post-Oscar-winning role, is adequate white trash; ironically, she plays the type of character who would have rooted for Brandon Teena's death. It's a shame about the script, written by Billy Bob Thornton and Tom Epperson; one wishes Raimi would go back to writing his own material. He does his best to goose the audience, but the story is just too run-of-the-mill.

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