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![]() "Midnight In The Garden Of Good And Evil" Is Too Long And Annoyingly Pointless. By Stacey Richter EVEN THE TITLE is too long: Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil? Like everything about this movie, the latest from director Clint Eastwood, the title is vague and pretentious and lacks focus. Not that it doesn't have some good parts (Evil!), but evil things must end, too; hopefully before they've meandered for two-and-a-half lazy hours.
John Kelso browses among the colorful eccentrics of Savannah like a bee in a botanical garden, gathering "honey" for his little book project. He meets witty drag queens (The Lady Chablis, playing herself), society matrons, and Southern belles, in no particular order. As far as I could tell, this guy never works. Those of us who fancy ourselves writers became annoyed by this. He drinks, he goes to great parties, he interviews fascinating characters and falls in love, but he doesn't even have a computer in his apartment. Please.
The absolute best part of this movie is Kevin Spacey. He's great as Jim Williams, a suave, witty, stinking rich Southern gentlemen who comes off as cross between Rhett Butler and Oscar Wilde. In the early scenes, Williams and Kelso waltz around one another while the tension slowly builds. Williams calls Kelso "dear boy" and looks to be on the verge of licking him. But after Williams goes to jail, the fun goes out of the Garden. Williams is at his best in his element--trading quips with other rich Southerners--and he just doesn't seem as exciting as a prisoner. And he's not nearly as well dressed. It's no surprise when, at the end of this movie, things really start falling apart. All of the subplots are tied up, neatly, and some last minute ghost-story stuff rounds out the main plot. Everybody is either happy, or dead, and the only surprise is that this movie got made at all.
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil is playing
at Century Gateway cinema (792-9000).
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