4.24.07 @ 12:02AM
Hard to believe, but the character played by Salma Hayek was executed at Sing Sing.
The most gruesome moment of Todd Robinson's gruesome film
Lonely Hearts doesn't make it onto the screen. This is a
bit of a surprise. From its opening credits -- over still photos of
murder victims in 1940s-style clothes and Police
Gazette-style photos lying where they fell, in pools of their
own blood -- to its final, graphic depiction of execution by
electrocution, the movie is not otherwise characterized by
reticence. Most memorable to some, perhaps, will be a scene
featuring what may turn out to be a classic splatter shot as a
naked woman sitting astride a man is shot in the back of the head,
so that her blood sprays over her partner. There seems not to be
much, in other words, that Mr. Robinson is likely to stick at. Yet
at his film's climax, the hero, Detective Elmer C., "Buster,"
Robinson (John Travolta), gingerly lifts the lid of a wooden crate
that recently contained a child's tricycle and peeps inside.
Instead of seeing what he sees, we see him moan, close the lid and
stagger away to be sick.
Why the sudden access of delicacy? You'll be able to work it
out, I think, if you see the film -- which I don't recommend. But
its drawing back at this point suggests that, at some level, the
director must still be capable of feeling shame for the prurience
of his camera in seeking out so many and so vivid images of violent
death. Like other films with the same interests -- last year's
Black Dahlia and Hollywoodland come to mind -- it
covers its salacious itch with a period setting. The
noir-era ambiance is to violence-porn what the jungles of
Africa used to be to naked flesh: an excuse to show what would look
outre in any other setting.
And, like those earlier films, Lonely Hearts gets an
extra kick from being based on real events. The so-called "Lonely
Hearts killers," Raymond Fernandez and Martha Beck (here played by
Jared Leto and Salma Hayek) met lonely war widows through personal
ads. Raymond would romance them, promise them marriage, steal their
life savings and then murder them. Martha was originally one of
Raymond's victims until he genuinely fell for her and allowed her
to join in the scam, representing herself as his sister. By all
accounts, including this one, she was the more vicious of the two.
Together they may have killed as many as 20 women. They were tried,
convicted, and executed at Sing Sing in 1951.
Mr. Leto and Miss Hayek naturally go to town with the lovers'
twisted psyches and their amour fou, showing while they
are allowed on screen why (and how) their story has been made into
movies at least twice before -- as The Honeymoon Killers
in 1970 and in a Mexican version, Deep Crimson
(Profundo Carmesi), in 1996. But Mr. Robinson's excuse for
revisiting the subject is that Buster Robinson, who with partner
Charlie Hildebrandt (James Gandolfini) eventually caught the
killers, was his grandfather. That may be why he spends so much of
his time on the detective rather than his detection. For if the
story of the killers' pursuit and capture is an exciting one, you
wouldn't know it from this film. Buster's detective work does get a
certain amount of attention but not nearly so much as his private
life, shown in parallel with the criminal career of the
killers.
Buster, you see, is a lonely heart too. His late wife committed
suicide for unknown reasons, leaving both Buster and their son,
Eddie (Dan Byrd), heart-broken. Now Eddie is acting out -- as they
wouldn't have said in the 1940s -- and Buster is riding him pretty
hard while trying to conceal an unofficial sexual relationship with
Rene (Laura Dern), who works at the station. It's a pity to see so
fine an actress as Miss Dern with so little to do. There's no real
story in the part of the film devoted to the detective's home life.
Instead, there are what amount to repeated establishing shots of
his pain and loneliness -- which I guess have to stand in for the
pain and loneliness of the killers' widow-victims, since none of
them is a fully-realized character.
This is the worst mistake made by the younger Mr. Robinson --
who has made TV movies and documentaries but no previous feature.
Maybe it's his taste for gore which makes him want to keep us from
knowing too much and therefore caring too much about the victims.
Or maybe he's trying to convey how desensitized Buster has become
to others' pain by dwelling so much on his own. But either way he
has taken out of the material most of what could have lent it moral
and dramatic force. All we're left with is Buster's sensitivity,
the wise-cracking cross-talk between the cops, the sicko killers'
obsession with each other and, well, the blood. I don't know about
you, but that's not enough for me.
topics:
Hollywood, Movies, Africa