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![]() Eccentric Characters And An Intriguing Situation Make This Odd Flick Worth Watching. By Stacey Richter LOVE SERENADE HAS all the ingredients of a enjoyable, funny, offbeat movie: Eccentric characters, an evocative setting, and an unusual, intriguing situation. Though these ingredients never quite add up to a larger or more intelligent whole, they're still delightful enough in themselves to make watching this movie a satisfying experience.
Smarmy is the adjective for this guy, who does T'ai Chi in the morning wearing a tri-color warm-up suit and gold aviator shades. He's like Tom Jones mixed with Werner Erhard and drained of all affect; George Shevtsov does a wonderful job of creating a truly, deeply insincere character who's just not there in any significant sense. He moves into the house next door to Dimity and Vicki Ann, who are both naive enough to be instantly smitten. Vicki Ann plies him with casseroles, while Dimity tries the more direct route of taking off her clothes. "Do you want me to ease your loneliness for you?" she asks in her awkward, jerky, manner. Sherry says yes, he would like her to ease it, and with a creepy, detached sort of interest--as though he's watching an infomercial--takes her virginity.
Writer/director Shirley Barrett has created an intriguing, offbeat situation for a movie, and develops the relationship between the sisters in a way that seems both comic and true. In fact, all the characters have a lively strangeness that's a lot of fun to watch. The owner of the restaurant Dimity works at is a nudist who likes to belt out western songs, and even Sherry himself is harboring some deep eccentricities. All this is captured with stunning cinematography by Mandy Walker, who makes Sunray look lovely and utterly forgotten at the same time. The colors are faded and drab; the town is windswept and flat and almost devoid of inhabitants, though full of water tanks, abandoned drive-ins and empty orchards. Even in the landscape the filmmakers have managed to convey a sense of the empty boredom and stark beauty of small-town life. The end of the story is too odd, in a way that doesn't add any meaning to the rest of the movie. I had the feeling that Barrett had let herself be seduced by the idea of quirkiness for its own sake, rather than in the service of the movie as a whole. The town of Sunray seemed capable of producing enough eccentrics naturally, without pushing things one step further into silliness. But if you can keep yourself from obsessing on the goofy ending, Love Serenade has enough genuine surprises and original characters to be well worth watching.
Love Serenade is playing exclusively at The
Loft (795-7777) cinema.
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