It’s tempting to say that Eyes of Laura Mars would have been a
better movie if its original writer, horror icon John Carpenter, had also been
the director—but then again, the central conceit of Carpenter’s story is so
goofy that it’s possible even he would have encountered difficulty in making
the narrative believable. The gimmick is that a fashion photographer becomes
psychically linked to a serial killer, “seeing” murders as they’re committed.
This makes her and all the people she knows suspects, and the premise
inevitably leads to a showdown between the photographer and the killer.
Journeyman director Irvin Kershner got the job of filming the story (David Zelag Goodman rewrote Carpenter’s script), and he delivers a diverting but somewhat forgettable thriller whose glamorous textures accentuate the lack of narrative substance. For instance, the main character’s photos were taken by real-life provocateur Helmut Newton, so the “shoots” depicted in the movie feature lingerie-clad models juxtaposed with gruesome backgrounds (e.g., car wrecks). Sensationalistic, to be sure, but not necessarily meaningful.
Journeyman director Irvin Kershner got the job of filming the story (David Zelag Goodman rewrote Carpenter’s script), and he delivers a diverting but somewhat forgettable thriller whose glamorous textures accentuate the lack of narrative substance. For instance, the main character’s photos were taken by real-life provocateur Helmut Newton, so the “shoots” depicted in the movie feature lingerie-clad models juxtaposed with gruesome backgrounds (e.g., car wrecks). Sensationalistic, to be sure, but not necessarily meaningful.
Faye
Dunaway stars as Laura Mars, a super-successful fashion photographer whose life
unravels when she starts “seeing” murders. Laura soon meets Detective John
Neville (Tommy Lee Jones), who is understandably skeptical about her insights.
As Neville investigates the people around Laura, he and Laura become
lovers. The movie gets formulaic during its middle section, with various
characters in Laura’s life presented and dismissed as possible suspects, and
whenever the movie needs a jolt, Kershner has Dunaway slip into a trance while
he cuts to hazy point-of-view shots representing the killer’s perspective
during a murder.
The movie actually loses credibility as it progresses, and the
ending is so trite it’s almost campy, but Kershner benefits from a strong
supporting cast. In particular, Rene Auberjonois, Brad Dourif, and Raul Julia
invest small roles with color and dimensionality. Unfortunately, the leads
don’t fare as well. Jones does his standard early-career taciturn-stud thing,
glowering through rote scenes as a cynical investigator, and Dunaway plays the
whole movie a bit too broadly—by the time she’s cowering in her bedroom while
the killer confronts her, she’s using hand movements so operatic they recall
Barbara Stanywck’s performance in the 1948 potboiler Sorry, Wrong Number. In fact, it says a lot about Eyes of Laura Mars that the most
memorable thing in the movie is Barbara Streisand’s overwrought theme song,
“Prisoner,” which plays at the beginning and end of the picture. Fittingly for
a movie set in the fashion industry, it’s all about the packaging, baby.
Eyes of Laura Mars: FUNKY
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