
Maggie
Alexander in Enthusiastic Sinners (2017) in 1080hd
Amy
Hargreaves in How He Fell in Love (2015) in 1080hd
Valeria
Bruni Tedeschi in Un chateau en Italie (2013) in
1080hd
Carole
Le Page in Les coquillettes (2012) in 1080hd
Andie
MacDowell in Deception, aka Ruby Cairo (1993)
There are two versions of this film, one a
short 90 minutes, the other longer by 16 minutes. Under
no circumstances should you rent, buy or watch the short
version, for two good reasons: (1) the severe editing
rendered the film nonsensical by removing scenes
essential to the plot and the characters' motivations;
(2) far more important, the dad-blamed fool of an editor
removed Andie MacDowell'a nudity.
TOTAL SPOILERS FOLLOW:
Deception is an international thriller shot on location
in Athens, Cairo, Vera Cruz, and Berlin. Laszlo Kovacs
(Ghostbusters; New York, New York) did the
cinematography. The stars are Viggo Mortensen and Liam
Neeson. The Aussie character actor Jack Thompson plays a
support role. That's a lot of capable and talented
people.
Bessie Faro (Andie MacDowell) learned that her handsome,
reckless, devil-may-care husband (Viggo) had died in a
fiery crash. She was dismayed to find out that she was
not only a widow, but a poor widow with a stack of bills
to pay. She thought that her husband had some money
stashed away, but didn't know where it could be. She
checked his known hiding places, but found nothing but a
tiny package of baseball cards hidden in her husband's
ramshackle workshop. By piecing together some cryptic
notations on the cards, she was able to determine which
banks held her husband's secret cache of money. The
cards also gave clues to the account numbers, and the
false names associated with each account.
So far, not bad at all.
Unfortunately, she then proceeded tediously across the
world from bank to bank to bank, getting big stacks of
money from each one until she reached Berlin, where she
found that someone had withdrawn the money just before
she arrived. Given the fact that nobody else had access
to the baseball cards, she knew that the person
withdrawing the money must have been her husband, and
that he was therefore not quite dead yet.
OK. Still not so bad, but from then on, the flimsy house
of cards quickly tumbled.
Bessie had $840,000 already collected, and would never
have to worry about money again, but she just had to
meet her husband face-to-face one more time so that she
could ask the time-honored noir question, "whyja do it,
Johnny?" She really said those words. Unfortunately,
MacDowell's genteel Southern drawl took some of the edge
out of that question, which should be asked by a sharpie
with a New York accent, and should be preceded by
"Sa-a-a-ay, ... "
She kept following the trail, putting herself in great
physical peril for no reason just so she could see
Johnny face-to-face. As soon as she met him, however,
she ran back out the door and told him they were
through. Huh? If she wanted to break up with him, it
wouldn't have been difficult. She could simply have
pretended that she never found out Johnny was alive, or
she could have simply sent him a nasty telegram from the
beach in Rio. Either way, she could and should have gone
home after visiting the last bank, thus avoiding several
life-endangering situations in Egypt. The husband also
did the exact opposite of what might be expected.
Although he seems to have gone to great pains to get
away from her, he wouldn't let her go after seeing her.
Hell, if he really wanted to have her around, he could
have done so at any time before their meeting, but he
never made any attempt.
So she chased him around the world to break up with him,
and he was running away to get back with her. If the
characters' motivations don't make sense, neither do
some of the plot details. In fact, when I went back to
watch some scenes again, I could clarify nothing. To the
contrary, I found more problems. When I watched the
movie the first time, I figured that certain enigmatic
details would be explained when the secrets were all
revealed. When I watched it again, knowing all the
secrets, I could no longer take comfort in the thought
that all would eventually be explained. There were some
things that just didn't make sense at all, and other
things which may have made sense but were inadequately
explained or expanded. To choose one outstanding
example, I thought that Johnny left the baseball cards
behind specifically so that his wife could find the
money and avoid the poorhouse after his "death." That
seemed logical because she was the only one who could
have deciphered the sequential logic of the cryptology.
When it turned out that Viggo did not intend for her to
empty those bank accounts, the great unexplained mystery
became "So just why did he leave those baseball cards
behind, and whom did he leave them for?" I still don't
know the answer to that question.
I could cite several other similarly confusing plot
points.
What about ol' Schindler? I don't have any idea why Liam
Neeson was in the film at all. He was a professor who
was feeding the poor in the third world, and Bessie ran
into him more than once as she followed the trail
leading to her husband and his money. Neeson's relevance
was purely peripheral. Bessie and the professor had a
brief and sweet encounter, a kiss or two which promised
to turn into a romance, but didn't.
What about Jack Thompson? I think he had three lines of
meaningless dialogue like, "Drive carefully, mate."
There is one thing in the film which may amuse you if
you are a baseball fan. When the Viggo Mortensen
character was a boy, he allegedly caught Bill
Mazeroski's famous homer ball in the 1960 World Series.
Of course, Viggo the actor is too young to play a man
who was that kid. Real-life Viggo had not yet reached
his second birthday on that historic day (Oct 13, 1960).
We should just ignore that persnickety point, however,
and exult in the fact that Viggo lives in the Middle
East under the pseudonym "Mr. Bill Mazeroski"!
Many of the film's problems stem from the decision to
create a Region 1 DVD from a chopped-up version of a
longer film. In order to create this version, the
running time has been cut from 106 minutes to 90. I'm
sure you understand that cutting 16 minutes from any
thriller is likely to result in a significant loss of
exposition and explication, and in this particular case
the cuts have caused many of the problems which I
described above.
Not to mention some lost nudity!
At one time there was actually one certifiably good
non-Mazeroski reason to watch this film. Beautiful Andie
MacDowell did a nude scene, the only such youthful
exposure of her entire career. Well, guess what? The
nude scene has disappeared from the version of the film
seen on the current Region 1 DVD. Unfortunately, that
scene is necessary to explain why the wife decided to
leave the husband after going to all the trouble of
finding him. With that scene absent, as I noted above,
she basically says, "Hi," followed by "we're through,"
and turns their encounter into a complete WTF experience
for the viewer.
The deletion of that scene would be reason enough to
avoid this DVD, but the disc is disappointing in all
other respects as well. It contains a 4:3 pan-n-scan
transfer with the sides of heads cut out of scenes.
Given the aspect ratio, the confusion caused by the
missing exposition, and the lack of nudity, I suppose
this is a version that was prepared for broadcast TV
somewhere or another. I'm not really sure of that point,
but I am sure you should avoid the American DVD of
Deception, as well as the
version on YouTube in HD.
---
There is also a German all-region DVD, published under
the title Ruby Cairo, that is the full 106-minute
version. By presenting the film as originally intended,
the German DVD solves many of the problems enumerated in
the paragraphs above:
1. It not only includes the complete, uncut film, but
presents it in a theatrical widescreen aspect ratio.
2. The character motivations are clear with the lengthy
sex scene restored. In the short version, it makes no
sense that Andie would chase her husband around the
world, and then leave when he answered the door. The
reason that was confusing is because she didn't actually
do that. The two of them did get together, had sex, and
talked a lot. In the lengthy process of multiple
flashbacks, mood shifts and extensive dialogue, Andie
flashed back to what their relationship used to be like,
and thus realized the man she was having sex with was
just not the same man she married.
3. There is now some point to Jack Thompson's presence
in the film. There is still not MUCH point, mind you,
but at least he has a substantial part instead of a
cameo.
4. Andie's nudity is back!
Unfortunately, the DVD has two other problems which
prevent me from recommending it
1. The transfer is far inferior in quality to the one on
the Region 1 DVD. The video quality is grainy and just
not sharp.
2. There is only one sound track, and that is in German.
The original English soundtrack is not available. There
are no sub-titles available. If you want to hear it,
your only choice consists of dubbed German voices.
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