Director Oliver Stone is
a man who needs a purpose. Whether it is to tear down legends or
build up conspiracy theories, his goal is to take his subject and
pump it up so that it appears bigger than all of us. His latest, U-Turn,
is more of the same, though there is no political figure or war
to wax grandiose about. Instead, he sets his sights simply on the
duplicity of man and his bleakest survival instincts.
At the dead center of U-Turn
is Bobby Cooper (Sean Penn), an eight-fingered lug making his way
through the Arizona desert to pay off a gambling debt in Las
Vegas. A busted radiator forces him to stop in the tiny, broken
town of Superior, where he meets up with its brutally odd
citizenry. Among them are Grace McKenna (Jennifer Lopez), a
beautiful tease with a horrible story, and her husband Jake (Nick
Nolte), a happily tortured real estate agent who has a taste for
the ungodly.
Knowing that Bobby is in financial
straits, Jake offers him the job of killing his wife for the
insurance money. In turn, Grace asks him to kill Jake so that
they can raid his secret stash. Bobby claims to not have the
stomach for murder, but when push comes to shove, somebody has to
go.
The elements of murder, a beautiful
woman, an ugly husband, and an outsider with bad timing all play
into film noir, which is how Stone labels the film. But he lacks
the constraint for noir's stylishness and goes, instead, for the
punch in the gut. Working from the screenplay by John Ridley,
based on his novel Stray Dogs, Stone unleashes rather than
unwinds the plot and swaps intrigue and romance for road kill and
masturbation.
At this point in his career, Stone works
pretty much in a genre of his own making. He's not afraid to
whack at the boundaries of convention or to experiment. U-Turn,
shot by longtime Stone cinematographer Robert Richardson, has a
bright, throw-back look, which, when paired with the hokey score
by Ennio Morricone, intensifies the sense that Bobby's stepped
into an alternative reality. The wealth of oddball characters --
Billy Bob Thornton as the mechanic, Claire Danes as a
dumb-as-dirt teenage hussy, and Jon Voight as a pseudo-wise blind
man -- add to Superior's suffocating atmosphere.
Yet, for all of the tricks of Stone's
sleeve, U-Turn becomes grueling as the destruction piles
up. By the end of the movie, when Bobby finally leaves Superior a
bloody mess, you can't help but feel a little battered yourself.
--Susan Ellis
Interviews
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Other Films by Oliver Stone
Any Given Sunday 
JFK 
Nixon 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Junk Mail 
The Nurse 
Shallow Grave 
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