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Chance and Consequences
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Run Lola Run should, by rights, have
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commas in its title, but commas would be false to its tempo, which is
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alternately whooshing and staccato. !!!(RunLo//laRUN)//!!! would be
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closer to the mark. This gimmicky German thriller, poised to be a crossover
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smash, is that rare beast: a good "music video" movie. That is, it's
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both fractured and fluid, with a helter-skelter syntax and a ceaselessly
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infectious backbeat. Beyond that, it's a blast.
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The premise is both
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simple and spherical. Punky, radish-haired Lola (Franka Potente) gets a panicky
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call from her boyfriend (Moritz Bleibtreu), who's in a phone booth: Why didn't
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she join him at the site of his big drug deal? Souped-up, black-and-white
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flashbacks illustrate her absence and his anguish: Her motorbike was stolen,
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she couldn't pick him up, he left a bag of drug money on the subway, his boss
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will kill him if he doesn't come up with 100,000 marks by noon. The camera
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rides in on Lola's mouth as she shrieks at the prospect of losing her man. Zoom
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in on the clock: 20 minutes to noon. The phone arcs through the air. As Lola
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dashes by, the camera revolves around her mother's room, then swoops in on a TV
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screen where a cartoon Lola is flying down a circular staircase past a
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neighbor's barking dog and out into the street, where she's live-action again
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and ready to run for her boyfriend's life. I've left out maybe 50 shots, and
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it's still just the first five minutes.
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The critic Elvis Mitchell describes Run Lola Run as
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"a video game that even resets itself at the end of each round." He means that
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Lola's race against the clock concludes and then begins again, the story told
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three times with different permutations and wildly different outcomes. People
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always die, but never the same people: It depends on how fast the cartoon Lola
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makes it down those circular stairs. In one go-round she's tripped and forced
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to hobble, which means she doesn't bump into the woman with the baby carriage,
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which means she doesn't arrive at her banker-father's office to catch the
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exchange between him and his pregnant lover, which means she doesn't stop her
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boyfriend from robbing a supermarket, which means ... This is the other extreme
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from those Dickens or Hardy novels in which someone's fate depends on his or
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her character; here, who lives or dies is a matter of a chance half-second or a
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random glance. People who cross Lola's path are frozen in the frame, their
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futures telescoped in rapid-fire black-and-white snapshots: In one variation, a
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woman whom Lola bumps ends up destitute and prematurely dead; in another, she
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wins the lottery. All because of where her path crossed with Lola's run.
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If you watch a lot of
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Star
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Trek spinoffs, you're no stranger to time loops, temporal
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fluxes, and the rippling consequences of chance--all staples of post-Stephen
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Hawking pop sci-fi. But Run Lola Run is more than the sum of its
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gimmicks: It has a real worldview. The young writer-director, Tom Tykwer, seems
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determined to kiss off the Sturm und Drang of generations of German
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culture. His running, red-haired riot grrrl stands for openness, crazed
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optimism, and a belief in endless possibilities--all of them underlined by
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multiple angles, split screens, slow and fast motion, and blizzards of
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hyperbolic imagery. Lola can breathe life back into her injured dad, whose
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illicit love affair is viewed as if it were a fuzzy video on a tired afternoon
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soap opera. She can charge through a flock of nuns (take that, Catholicism!),
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rob a huge bank (take that, Capitalism!), and stop a roulette wheel with her
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glass-shattering scream (take that, Chance!). She can goof something up and
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then replay the sequence until she gets it right, taking the narrative into her
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own hands. The movie could be dismissed as all adrenaline-swamped pyrotechnics,
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but adrenaline can be its own justification: In Run Lola Run , it makes
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stuff happen big-time.
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O scar Wilde's comedies are doubtless long-winded, but
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their wind blows in from a high peak: The characters' formulations are bracing,
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and their epigrams have a sting. In the new, all-star adaptation of An Ideal
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Husband , one of Wilde's richest plays, writer-director Oliver Parker has
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practically pared the speeches down to their topic sentences. The movie is
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diverting enough--it's good fun--but much of the genius is gone with the
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wind.
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The plot is ever
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contemporary. Sir Robert Chiltern (Jeremy Northam) is esteemed by the world and
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revered by his wife, Gertrude (Cate Blanchett). He is that rare thing, a public
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figure with an unblemished past. But Wilde's protagonists all have dark
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secrets, and Chiltern's turns out to be a doozy. His fortune rests on a
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two-decades-old piece of insider trading involving a successful international
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canal scheme. An incriminating missive has fallen into the hands of an
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unscrupulous fortune hunter, Mrs. Cheveley (Julianne Moore), who's happy to
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destroy it if Chiltern trashes his high ideals and throws his support to a
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real-estate scam in which his blackmailer is heavily invested. Exposure would
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be devastating to both his political and marital future, but how can he violate
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his principles? Help arrives from an odd source: Lord Goring (Rupert Everett),
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a rich, indolent bounder and somewhat halting suitor of Chiltern's sister Mabel
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(Minnie Driver). An ex-flame of Mrs. Cheveley, Goring can match her in
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Machiavellian wiles. But can he help to repair Gertrude's shattered faith?
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Reviewing An Ideal Husband in 1895, George Bernard
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Shaw wrote that "the modern note is struck in Sir Robert Chiltern's assertion
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of the individuality and courage of his wrongdoing as against the mechanical
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idealism of his stupidly good wife, and in his bitter criticism of love that is
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only the reward of merit." This idea is probably more Shavian (or Ibsenite)
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than Wildean, but the larger point is clear: that Wilde was more concerned with
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exploding the notion of an "ideal" person than with punishing Chiltern's sin,
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and in showing that part of becoming human is learning to forgive others'
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lapses. That "modern" note is largely absent from Parker's adaptation, in which
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Gertrude is the soulful center and Blanchett's performance is radiant in its
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forthrightness. She's so good, you don't want her illusions to be dashed. The
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suspense is that of a conventional melodrama: Will Chiltern defy Mrs. Cheveley
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in the name of truth? And will the shiny-eyed Gertrude get to see him do
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it?
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At his best, Parker brings out the waltzingly
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malicious undercurrents in Wilde's "polite" intercourse, and his camera is at
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just the right distance to catch the anxious flickers of individuality under
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the socially mandated poses. That tension is superbly embodied in Julianne
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Moore, who issues poisoned ultimatums from behind a smile frozen firmly in
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place and an erect carriage that carries only subtle traces of the warped inner
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being. She and Northam have scenes of deliciously controlled viciousness.
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Almost as good are her scenes with Everett, who can't quite transcend his
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languid self-love enough to make us believe that he once had a thing for her.
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He's less credible yet making cow eyes at Minnie Driver, whose tomboyish
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gumption is often charming but more often strange.
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The schlock-waltz score (at times bordering on
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calliope music) by Charlie Mole is one of the most grating ever written: It has
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a way of making the lines seem facetious. Was the hope that middlebrows would
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be seduced by its jaunty sentimentality and highbrows take it as ironic? It's
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hard to know what is meant as irony. Parker transposes one scene to the inside
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of a theater--where, of all things, The Importance of Being Earnest is
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having its legendary premiere. Quite a tribute to the playwright, except that
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one set of Wilde's characters now talks over the lines of another set and pays
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no attention to the action on stage. The result is not a fugue but an
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impertinence. What would Wilde have made of people so indifferent to both
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Earnest and his own famous curtain speech (here delivered by Michael
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Culkin)? Parker's "tribute" ends up making Wilde seem both prolix and
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irrelevant. Was that the intention? To make his own adaptation seem more
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savvy?
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