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The Forgotten
Reviewed by Rich
Drees
Although 14 months have passed, Telly (Julianne Moore) still deeply mourns
the loss of her nine-year old son Sam who was killed in a plane crash with
several other children. Every day she spends time in Sam’s room, looking
through a photo album, watching home movies on the VCR or just holding onto
his baseball glove. One day she discovers that the photo album is empty and
the videotapes blank. When she confronts her husband (Anthony Edwards) and
therapist (Gary Sinise), they tell her that she never had a son; she has
hallucinated the past decade of her life following the trauma of a
miscarriage.
Not
wanting to believe what she’s been told, Telly turns to Ash (Dominick West),
the father of one of Sam’s friends who also perished in the plane crash. At
first Ash can’t remember his daughter, until Telly manages to discover
evidence in his apartment of her existence. Together, the pair try to
discover who the mysterious forces are that are altering people’s memories
and why.
The
Forgotten starts
off with an intriguing premise and builds steadily on it through the first
half. While there really is no doubt as to Telly’s sanity in the mind of the
viewer, the film adroitly sets up the elements that are arrayed against
Telly. There are subtle hints that Telly’s memory may be playing tricks on
her during her first visit with her psychiatrist, setting us up to seethe
she is being manipulated. Moore does some outstanding work here, never going
overboard as the grieving and determined mother.
But
the overall effectiveness of any thriller depends on how well it pays off
what it has set up. Unfortunately this is where The Forgotten
stumbles and falls face down into the dirt. Telly and Ash make a few leaps
of logic in their investigations that lead them to their final confrontation
with the forces behind what has been going on. However, these are deductions
that they could not have made based strictly on the information we see them
receive. Moore’s character at one point refers to these forces as “The
Ancients,” a term no one has mentioned anywhere else in the film before that
moment. Also, despite a few overt displays of power and the tampering with a
majority of the character’s minds, the forces behind these events are left
too mysterious, consequently they never generate much menace. Their earthly
agents seem to be deathly afraid of them, though we are never shown why.
This lack of threat undermines the film’s finale as we never get an idea of
what Tilly is facing when she reaches the film’s climactic moments. The
film’s coda is equally frustrating, as it shows some resolution for Tilly
and Ash, however, the fates of several other characters are left
unaddressed. These problems, taken in total, leave me to wonder if one is
better off waiting for the inevitable DVD release in hopes for an extended
edit of the film or a deleted scene section to help smooth over the finale’s
rough spots. |