By Kit Bowen
Story
Marber, who also wrote the screenplay, describes
Closer as "a love story. It's about other things, [too]--sexual jealousy, the male gaze, the lies we tell ourselves and those we are most intimate with, the ways in which people find themselves through using others. But in the end, it's a nice simple love story. And as with most love stories, things go wrong…" Boy, do they ever. In this case, the "love stories" revolve around two couples: Dan (
Jude Law), a frustrated novelist who falls for quirky stripper Alice (
Natalie Portman) after a chance meeting on a London street, and Larry (
Clive Owen), a boorish dermatologist who falls for esoteric photographer Anna (
Julia Roberts) after a chance meeting in a London aquarium. Through happenstance, these four people manage to intermix their relationships, falling in and out of love with each other at an alarming and brutal speed over the course of a few years. Giving away who ends up with whom would spoil the fun, but one thing's for certain--just like in real life, these characters are never quite sure if they are truly happy with the final choices they have made.
Acting
This movie is an actor's dream--as most plays-turned-movies are--and all four of
Closer's protagonists rise to the occasion. Here,
Law's streak of mediocre films finally comes to an end, and he definitely has saved the best for last. In a switch from
Alfie's confident lothario,
Law's Dan is a bespectacled, soft-spoken fellow who wears his heart on his sleeve as his love vacillates between Alice and then, Anna. As Anna,
Roberts is Dan's counterpart, bouncing just as impulsively between Dan and Larry, but playing it far more reserved and aloof. It's a welcomed departure from
Roberts' usual perkiness--and probably her strongest performance to date. It is
Portman and
Owen, however, who steal the show. Besides a face that could launch a thousand ships, the all-grown up
Portman is brilliant as the tough-as-nails stripper who is secretly oh-so-fragile and the most honest of the four, while
Owen, best known to American audiences as
King Arthur, roars on screen as the self-assured Larry, a character so full of passion and bravado it's hard to take your eyes off him. Oscar should come calling.
Direction
Backed by a major studio and featuring an all-star cast,
Closer still manages to maintain that indie, unpretentious feel--which is just the way director
Mike Nichols, who made his name making small, powerful gems about human relationships such as
The Graduate and
Carnal Knowledge, likes it. And much like the gritty
We Don't Live Here Anymore, a similarly themed indie released earlier this year,
Closer doesn't get sugarcoated. The raw language will more than likely hit a nerve, and anyone who has ever been in love will spot a few of their own characteristics and experiences. As
Nichols explains, "
Closer concerns itself with the fact that, in love, we remember beginnings and endings and tend to edit it out the middles…" Being that the film is based on a play, the scenes tend to be over dramatized in parts, but each juicy, intense moment still holds you completely riveted to your seat, as the four characters continue to raise the stakes and keep you guessing who is going to betray who next.