Talking To The Screen
A Life Less Ordinary :1997
'A Life Less Ordinary' is about two young people who are destined to fall in love. However, as it stands, they're not even on their way to meeting, let alone falling in love. To remedy this situation, two angels are sent to insure the lovers' fate. Playing the young lovers are Ewan McGregor and Cameron Diaz. Both are young and untested. McGregor has had one absolutely breathtaking role in the mind blowing 'Transpotting'. Cameron Diaz had been in the blockbuster, 'The Mask' with Jim Carey, but could at best be considered a rising star. To complement these two starlets two veteran actors are cast as the angels, Oscar winner Holly Hunter, and Delroy Lindo. In my opinion, while stunning, Cameron Diaz didn't deliver an inspired performance until 'Being John Malkovich'. Ewan McGregor, neither before or since, has acted as well as he did in 'Trainspotting'. Maybe he set the bar too high. Fortunately, Hunter and Lindo are seasoned pros, and while not exceptional, their acting creates a wonderful relationship between the two angels. The m?lange of destiny and love has been tried and tested. However, the anthropomorphosis of destiny in two capricious earthbound angels is certainly novel. Instead of shooting the arrow of love into our young couple, O'Reilly and Jackson (very angelic names, no?), concoct a scheme in which Robert (McGregor), a janitor, kidnaps Celine (Diaz), the daughter of a wealthy executive. Robert is the most unlikely of kidnappers, and Celine the rarest kind of hostage: willing. Through a series of comedic bungles and angelic hijinks, the two finally develop feelings for each other and fall in love. Sadly the ending of the film is thoroughly disappointing. There is a bust shot of Ewan McGregor and Cameron Diaz addressing the viewer in front of a backdrop of clips from the movie. They each, basically, give a mildly philosophical monologue on love and fate and their ridiculous romance. Whatever simple affection I had for this movie was severely damaged by this atrocious sequence. First of all, I just saw the movie, there's no need to recap the action in the last scene. Secondly, the scene violates one of the basic tenets of any art form: "show, don't tell". Having the screenwriter's intentions spelled out to me through two characters, clearly not speaking in the voices they have been using all movie, is infuriating. (Shockingly, the same man who wrote the obnoxious ending speeches in 'A Life Less Ordinary' also wrote the script for 'Trainspotting'. Yet another example of the fluke of talent that the heroin drama evoked.) 'A Life Less Ordinary' is a fun and easy film to watch. But that's about it. Watch for Delroy Lindo as infuriated angel when Robert's naivet? foils one of his schemes: comedic brilliance.