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Friday
29Aug

Movie Review - 'Tell No One'

Tell No One

Starring François Cluzet, Marie-Josée Croze, and Kristin Scott Thomas
Directed by Guillaume Canet
Rated R


tellnoone_galleryposter.jpg Eight years earlier, Dr. Alexandre Beck (François Cluzet) was a suspect in the murder of his wife (Marie-Josée Croze from Munich and The Diving Bell and the Butterfly). Her death was gruesome, though the doctor was eventually cleared when a serial killer whose modus operandi closely resembled that in the Beck case was arrested on other charges.

In the eight years since her death, Alex has not put the past behind him, which would be impossible for anyone to ask of him. He has found stability in his work and seems to be adjusting better everyday. But then he gets a strange e-mail that appears to be recent security camera footage of his late wife at a train station and his mind, understandably, goes to a different place.

Is his wife alive? Or is this some other cruel trick?

Complicating matters is the discovery of two bodies near the site of where his wife was buried, and evidence at the scene suggests that Beck might somehow be involved, reopening the case of his own dead wife, who may not be dead, after all.

Tell No One is more convoluted than it requires, throwing an arsenal at twists at the audience that we have some difficultly cutting through. The film isn’t impenetrable, but given what’s good here, Tell No One doesn’t do itself any favors by trying to stay two steps ahead all the time.

Almost without exception, movies that attempt to outsmart their audience are too self-aware; rather than sticking with the story they started to tell us, they veer off into Unpredictaville, not recognizing that we were really enjoying the ride on the main road before. The Sixth Sense succeeds because the plan all along was setting up the swerve. Tell No One is about one particular thing, and then to keep you in the dark for an extra ten minutes, it completely subverts itself so you can’t guess the ending. It’s a trick, and as Gob Bluth so astutely reminds us on Arrested Development, a trick is something a whore does for money.

But all is not lost: Tell No One has some pretty intense action about midway through, and I really liked some of the supporting characters, including Kristin Scott Thomas as Beck’s longtime confidant and the haggard François Berléand as the detective who has reopened the investigation against Beck. Cluzet is a very good anchor, playing the archetypal Hitchockian wrong(ed) man with a lot of depth and fear. He doesn't have Cary Grant's charm at his disposal to bribe his way out of things and just has to wait out his own fate. His fear is palpable, making him a lot easier to relate to.

I’m sure actor-turned-director Guillame Canet was going for a high minded thriller with twist after twist, and that’s what we got. But sometimes even Chubby Checker does another dance.

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