Limbo
For a while it looks as if John Sayles might do for our largest state in
Limbo what he did for the second-biggest in his masterpiece Lone
Star. Set in contemporary Alaska, this independent veteran's latest deftly
establishes the social, cultural, and personal details of his setting and
characters; then he takes it all on a detour to nowhere. David Strathairn is
lean, melancholy, and even sexy as Joe Gastineau, a former golden-boy fisherman
who fell from grace with the sea after a fatal accident. Mary Elizabeth
Mastrantonio gives her best performance yet (and demonstrates a decent set of
pipes) as Donna De Angelo, an itinerant aging lounge singer between boyfriends
and gigs and saddled with a bright but resentful daughter. The two hit it off,
but just as it seems they might get their lives jump-started, Joe's shady
brother Bobby (Casey Siemaszko) shows up asking a favor. What follows is either
an exercise in self-deconstruction or a lesson in how not to write an ending;
with Limbo, Sayles shows how high, and low, he can go. At the
Avon.
-- Peter Keough
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