YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsMovies

Answers to Nothing' review: 'Crash'-lite

Also reviewed: 'Kinyarwanda' from Rwanda; 'Outrage' from Japan; 'The Yellow Sea' from South Korea and more.

December 02, 2011

The title of the ensemble drama "Answers to Nothing" is certainly truth in advertising. Though this "Crash"-lite intersection of L.A. stories, directed by Matthew Leutwyler from a script he co-wrote with Gillian Vigman, effectively portrays human loneliness and alienation, there's a lack of real conclusiveness to many of the film's characters and situations.

The crisscross of Angelenos includes Ryan (Dane Cook), a moody shrink cheating on his fertility-challenged, lawyer wife (Elizabeth Mitchell) with an earthy rocker chick (Aja Volkman); a former police cadet (Erik Palladino) still grieving for his late wife; an anxious schoolteacher (Mark Kelly) hiding in a world of video games; a curiously self-hating TV writer (Kali Hawk) who starts dating a gentle music engineer (Zach Gilford); a pretty cop (Julie Benz) investigating a child abduction case; and a recovering alcoholic (Miranda Bailey) fighting to keep custody of her paralyzed brother.

The connections among these various folks — seemingly the film's raison d'être — although not illogical, feel more random than intriguing.

Fortunately, the strong cast (which also includes Barbara Hershey as Ryan's idealistic mother and Greg Germann as a kidnapping suspect) helps keep things watchable. But it can never fully surmount an overlong, largely underwhelming script that often swaps forced personality quirks and symbolic gestures for honest dimension.

— Gary Goldstein

"Answers to Nothing." MPAA rating: R for some strong sexual content, nudity, violence and language. Running time: 2 hours, 3 minutes. At AMC's Century City 15, Century City; Regency's South Coast Village, Santa Ana.

The deliberately paced, quietly immersive "Kinyarwanda" tells a tangle of stories set in and around 1994's Rwandan genocide, a roughly 100-day nightmare that pit that country's Hutu majority against its Tutsi minority, resulting in as many as a million violent deaths. This ambitious first feature film about the period made entirely by Rwandans (shot in a remarkable 16 days), while hardly an all-inclusive look at this complex conflict, paints a heartfelt, fairly restrained picture of a nation under siege.

Writer-director Alrick Brown crafted the film from true accounts of genocide survivors as well as from the movie's Rwandan cast and crew members. Six interwoven tales essentially lead up to — or back to — the point that, thanks to Rwanda's most respected Muslim mufti (scholar), the country's mosques became a refuge for the Tutsis as well as those Hutus who chose not to kill. Islam emerges here as a critical and — some viewers may think, given later world events — unexpected instrument of peace.

The people-over-politics story lines include the intermarriage of a Hutu and a Tutsi, a teen girl who survives her murdered parents, and a repentant Hutu soldier recounting his heinous actions.

"Kinyarwanda," whose title is the name of Rwanda's official language, is haunting stuff.

— Gary Goldstein

"Kinyarwanda." No MPAA rating. In English and Kinyarwandan with English subtitles. Running time: 1 hour, 39 minutes. At Laemmle's Music Hall 3, Beverly Hills; Laemmle's Town Center 5, Encino; Laemmle's Playhouse 7, Pasadena.

"Outrage," the latest offering from prolific Japanese filmmaker and actor Takeshi Kitano, marks his return to the pure, visceral gangster picture, so low-key and offhanded in its mastery that it becomes something like a pulp sleight-of-hand trick.

Kitano plays a middle manager of sorts in the Japanese yakuza gangster underworld, destined never to rise to the heights of the true bosses even as promotions are constantly dangled before him. Against a complex web of deal-making, promises made and broken and alliances well above his paygrade, he finds himself simply fighting for survival.

With an undercurrent of dark humor, like the severed thumb that lands in someone's veggie noodle soup, Kitano abstracts the contemporary struggle, apparently an international one, to just hold a once-visible career path in view as industries crumble and realign.

Though it may at times seem like just another Japanese gangster picture, in "Outrage," Kitano's sense of pacing is so precise, at once restrained and relentless, that the film becomes a vortex, pulling audiences in deeper and deeper.

— Mark Olsen

"Outrage." MPAA rating: R for strong brutal bloody violence throughout, language, a scene of sexuality and some nudity. In Japanese with English subtitles. Running time: 1 hour, 49 minutes. At the Nuart, West Los Angeles.

"Twi"-guy Kellan Lutz's ab-tastic body is about the only thing shown to its best advantage in "A Warrior's Heart," a ho-hum drama whose many moving parts feel decidedly recycled.

Advertisement
Los Angeles Times Articles
|
|
|