THE RULES OF ATTRACTION
More like "The Rule of Distraction," as Quentin Tarantino acolyte Roger Avary
(Killing Zoe) returns to the screen with this jazzed-up but empty
adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis's homage to '80s spiritual bankruptcy. Avary
dumps the relentless contemporary pop-cultural references of the original,
setting the roundelay of misfired desire in the generic cultural and moral
wasteland of Camden College, a liberal-arts party campus somewhere in New
Hampshire. Stumbling among binges, casual sex, and hangovers is Sean Bateman
(James Van Der Beek), younger brother of Patrick, the cutthroat Wall Street
broker featured in Mary Harron's much more daring and pointed adaptation of
Ellis's American Psycho. Beyond getting drunk, stoned, and laid, cutting
classes, and selling dope, Sean likes to eat and ponder who's leaving love
letters in his mailbox.
That's the problem with all the characters in Rules: not satisfied with
vapid hedonism, they're occasionally stirred by the illusion of romance. So
Sean thinks Lauren (Shannyn Sossamon) is the mystery lover, Lauren longs for
callow Victor (Kip Pardue), Victor is off on a drug-addled orgy through Europe,
Lauren's bi-ex Paul (Ian Somerhalder) is smitten with Sean, and no one loves
the girl in the bathtub. Avary conveys Ellis's appearance/reality and
unreliable-narrator motifs via broad irony, slick fantasy sequences, and a
time-reversal gimmick that suggests a diabolical circularity. Hellish indeed,
since the film is utterly pointless the first time around. (110 minutes) At
the Entertainment (Swansea only), Providence Place 16, and Showcase (Seekonk
Route 6 and Warwick Mall only).
Issue Date: October 11 - 17, 2002
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