
TIME CODE - R-RATED
Director-screenwriter Mike Figgis is handing us a whopper of innovative filmmaking
through the use of a split screen times four in "Time Code". The problem is, technique
can never be more important than the story in a good film. And in this case, all you're
really watching is technique rather than character development or story. "Time Code" is not an
example of a good film. It's barely watchable and I really had no patience for his experiment.
Roughly four different sets of characters/actions are taking place all at the same time. It was
shot on video and the actors improvised within the scene structure that was given them. And
it's rather obvious because the actors tend to ramble. We are expected to be able to pay attention
to all four screens simultaneously but are drawn to one or the other more so when the audio
heightens of lessens. It takes a while to get used to. Still, after about 45-minutes of bouncing
my attention back and forth, I
didn't give a hoot about anything or anybody and so it went. This is a director's movie because
the acting is surely lost to the technique.
Jeanne Tripplehorn (Lauren) plays a rich lesbian in a relationship with Salma Hayek (Rose) and
they spend a lot of time in the back seat of a limo with Tripplehorn's character chewing gum,
squirming and smoking most of the time; Rose, an aspiring actress is having an affair with
Alex Green (Stellan Skarsgård), a film production company owner who's married to Emma
(Saffron Burrows) who spends
a lot of time just hanging around. Fellow production executives include Holly Hunter, Xander Berkeley,
and Steven Weber. Richard Edson as a lunatic independent director on hand as comic relief and Julian Sands
portrays a massage therapist who looks as if he never gave a massage in his whole life.
The actors stage their scenes separately and occasionally interact until the great convergence at the end.
Lotta says "Time Code" is a big, big bummer and a big waste of time.
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