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Eternal Sunshine Of
The Spotless Mind
Reviewed by Rich Drees
Following the ugly breakup
with his girlfriend Clementine (Kate Winslet), Joel (Jim Carey) discovers
that she has had the entire relationship erased from her memory. Unable to
bear the heartbreak himself and distraught that she could so casually
discard their time together, he decides to undergo the procedure himself.
But as his memories are slowly being erased he realizes that he doesn’t want
to loose the good memories along with the bad and so Joel and a memory of
Clementine go on a run through his mind to try and save at least one happy
moment from their time together.
Jim
Carey has given some strong performances before (most notably in 1999’s
Man On The Moon), but his work in Eternal Sunshine is perhaps his
strongest to date. His rage and despair over the dissolution of his
relationship with Clementine are palpable and ring true for anyone who has
gone through a similar experience. Yet he plays the quieter moments of the
relationship with a warmth and honesty that his acting has only previously
hinted at and serves to reinforce the pain he shows when the relationship
disintegrates. As written, Clementine could have been played as completely
self-absorbed. Winslet, however, manages to inject her with a layer of
likeability that helps the audience to believe that Joel could fall in love
Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind
is perhaps that most literate science-fiction film in a long time. There are
no explosions, no action set pieces. The only notable visual effects are in
the imaginative depictions of Joel’s mindscape. Director Michel Gondry
manages some nice subtle touches that comment on the nature of memory. In
one scene the background crowd all have blurry faces, leading viewers to
wonder if they could recall the faces of random people passed on the street.
Instead, the film is a story about how people are impacted by new
technology. Everyone knows the pain of heartbreak, be it from the death of a
loved one or the dissolution of a romantic relationship. But if offered the
chance, would you erase all memory of that relationship to take away the
pain? What would happen to anything you learned about yourself, or the
changes made to you as a person because of that relationship? Would you be
dooming yourself to making the same mistakes over and over again? These are
questions that the movie poses to both its characters and its audience,
leaving movie-goers with something more deep to discuss upon leaving the
theatre than where to go for a post-movie drink. |