Fallen

Memphis Flyer

DIRECTED BY: Gregory Hoblit

REVIEWED: 01-26-98

If we have to have all this business about guardian angels – the books, the magazine articles, the TV series Touched By An Angel – well, it seems only fair that demons get equal time. So it is that Fallen, starring Denzel Washington, has come about. Call it Touched By A Devil.

This is literally the premise of Fallen. Washington plays homicide detective John Hobbes, who battles an unseen evil force which passes from human to human by touch and takes over its host to do its bidding.

Hobbes has been tagged by the demon through one of its bodies belonging to serial killer Edgar Reese (Elias Koteas). Hobbes nabbed Reese and is there to witness his collar’s last breaths – used in part to sing the Rolling Stones’ “Time Is On My Side” – in the gas chamber. Hobbes is nonchalant about Reese’s passing that night and boasts that he looked good being interviewed on no less than four channels. But Hobbes’ peace of mind is soon disturbed when he begins to investigate new murders that look exactly like Reese’s dirty work.

These are no ordinary copycat murders. Whoever is doing them knows more than the average television viewer. It appears to be an inside job and all clues increasingly point to Hobbes. The killer leaves little hints, writings on walls and on his victims. Hobbes pieces these marks together, leading him to Gretta Milano (Embeth Davidtz), an expert on angels and the daughter of a respected cop who 30 years earlier fell victim to this same demon. So Hobbes knows who the killer is, but he doesn’t know what form he’ll take or how to prevent him from coming in contact with his family, his friends, or even himself.

Fallen is directed by Gregory Hoblit (Primal Fear) and written by Nicholas Kazan (Reversal of Fortune). Together, Hoblit and Kazan are going for a certain style. The camera spins around to the demon’s various bodies as it makes its way congo-line-like through a crowd, while its viewpoint is seen in brightened blues and reds. Their hero, Hobbes, ruminates over his situation through lines of important-sounding mumbo-jumbo (“I love the night, the street, the smells. … Sometimes you come face to face with yourself”). The effect of the filmmakers’ mindfulness is neither thrilling nor particularly eerie (though it does feel very, very long). Fallen lacks, in a word, soul.

--Susan Ellis

Full Length Reviews
Fallen
Fallen
Fallen

Capsule Reviews
Fallen
Fallen

Other Films by Gregory Hoblit
Primal Fear

Film Vault Suggested Links
Ronin
The Edge
Zero Kelvin

Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Gregory Hoblit at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com

Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the Cast Vote button.