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From there, the tale diverges a bit: I don't remember a prison catfight in the original, and recall Red relying more on a woodsman with a large axe than her own handguns, but it has been a while since I read it. This is, however, unashamedly grim with a small G. Er, and one m. :-) The Lutzs take "dysfunctional" to new levels, and it's frankly astonishing that Vanessa has retained any sense of morality, albeit a severely skewed one. I wasn't surprised when her only decent relationship was terminated by a drive-by. The cast is a mixture of has-beens (Sutherland, before resurrection in 24, and Shields) and will-bes (Witherspoon and also Brittany Murphy), but all deliver fine performances. The weakest point is a script more concerned with satire than logic - would they really let a convicted arsonist carry a lighter in jail? No wonder Oliver Stone is a producer, given the undeniable echoes of Natural Born Killers. As a benchmark, at one point, when Vanessa shows Bob a photo of her "real" father, it's actually serial killer Richard Speck. If that amuses - and must confess, it did us - this film is probably for you. |
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