Bilgi :Looks like this is Get To Know Chicago Month at the movies. Two weeks ago in The Break-Up, Vince Vaughn took a busload of tourists on a sightseeing trip through the Windy City, and now, in The Lake House, Keanu Reeves plays an architect who shows some of the city's more unique buildings
to Sandra Bullock. But in the latter film, there's just one
catch: they do not visit these buildings at the same time.
It's pretty much impossible for them to do so, because Reeves
lives in 2004 and Bullock lives in 2006, and they have been
exchanging letters back and forth in time through a sort of
magical mailbox. So he leaves her a map and tells her which
places to visit, and when she arrives at one, she finds a
two-year-old message waiting for her in the graffiti. It's a
good thing nobody cleaned that wall or posted any bills there!
 Sandra Bullock stars as Dr. Kate
Forster, who's reluctant to give up her rental home on
the lake
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The time-bending premise might remind viewers
of Frequency (2000), in which a father and son
communicated across the decades through a ham radio. But The Lake House is actually a remake of a
Korean film which came out at about the same time, known in
these parts as Il Mare. The new version was written by
David Auburn, the award-winning Proof playwright, and directed by
Alejandro Agresti, an Argentinian making his first
English-language feature. And while it has some interesting
ideas and some nice mood moments, it never quite comes
together.
This is partly because the filmmakers don't
seem to know quite how to flesh these characters out. Bullock
plays Kate Forster, a doctor who has recently finished her
residency and is too busy with work, work, work to even think
about having a social life, let alone a love life. She gets
along well enough with her colleague, Anna (Shohreh
Aghdashloo), and she has a mother (Willeke van Ammelrooy),
too, but their conversations aren't very revealing; even with
these two women in her life, the filmmakers have to resort to
making Kate a fan of Jane Austen books and Cary Grant movies
to give her a sense of dimension. As Alex Wyler, the eldest
son in a dysfunctional family of architects, Reeves has a
little more to do, but he looks and acts so different from his
dad (Christopher Plummer) and younger brother (Ebon
Moss-Bachrach) that they never seem like more than a trio of
actors.
 Keanu Reeves as Alex Wyler, who
finds a very different lake house waiting for
him
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And then there is all that time-bending stuff
itself. If the story had been told from only one character's
perspective, it would have been trippy enough. But the story
is told from both points of view simultaneously—and the
opening scenes even trick you into thinking that Alex's part
of the story takes place after Kate's, instead of vice
versa—so you could spend most of the film just trying
to sort things out (who knows how much about who and when, and
so on). Don't get me wrong, I like time-travel stories and all
the paradoxes thereof, but keeping track of these characters,
it is a tad difficult to get lost in the moment the way
you should during a romance.
Thankfully, there is a scene in which
the jumping back and forth in time is put on hold, and the
film basks in a single, luxurious, romantic moment. Kate does
not have a boyfriend in 2006, but she did in 2004, and Alex
bumps into him shortly before he is about to put on a surprise
birthday party for her. The boyfriend (Dylan Walsh)—one of
those dull sticks that exists in these movies for the sole
purpose of being dumped by the female protagonist—invites Alex
to the party, and Alex, eager to meet Kate in the flesh,
introduces himself to her outside on the porch. Agresti allows
the scene to unfold slowly, patiently, using just a few long,
uninterrupted shots—and while Reeves' talents as an actor may
be somewhat limited, he and Bullock do have a certain
chemistry (remember 1994's Speed?), and it is fun to see them "meet"
like this. And even though we know how the scene will end (not
least because the Kate of the future has no recollection of
meeting Alex), we are still curious to see how it gets
there.
 Kate plays chess with her dog,
Jack
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But scenes like this do raise other problems.
It is understandable that Alex, as he begins to fall in love
with Kate, would want to track her down and see what she is up
to in 2004, even though she has never heard of him yet. But
Kate doesn't express any interest in tracking Alex down to see
what has become of him in 2006, even though he would obviously
remember her. For that matter, while Alex does ask what the
world is like in the future—but without getting into
specifics, like who won the presidential election—he never
expresses any curiosity in his own future. In a world where
people Google each other before their first date, this seems
unlikely.
The Lake House
also falls into that trap that afflicts so many time-travel
stories, in which the filmmakers cannot decide if the future
is already fated, and the characters are just living through
the experience, or if the future—and therefore the past-is
open to revision. Frequency got
around this by openly embracing revisionism, but The Lake House seems to want a sense of
tragic inevitability, all the better for jerking tears out of
the audience; however, the film can't quite commit to this,
and so there are isolated scenes in which actions in the past
produce spontaneous changes in the future. And it all leads to
an ending that is just riddled with holes.
 When Alex and Kate meet at the
lake house, anything could happen
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The film's narrative problems are compounded
by Agresti's laid-back direction, which may work for the porch
scene at the party mentioned above, but all too often just
leaves scenes sitting there, without grabbing the audience or
taking us any deeper into the lives of the characters. Several
scenes end abruptly, or they just fade away. Put this
uncertain style together with the complications of sending
messages through time, and the film seems both overworked and
undercooked. Oh, and did I mention the somewhat clunky plot
mechanics involving a super-intelligent dog who bridges the
two timelines? The titular house by the lake sure is pretty, though. review by Peter T. Chattaway |