The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Features  |  Reviews
FIND MOVIES
Movie List
Loading ...
or
Find Theaters and Movie Times
or
Search Movies
WFNX_1000x50g

Review: Cold Souls

Paul Giamatti can't heat up Cold Souls
By PETER KEOUGH  |  August 17, 2009
2.0 2.0 Stars

 

Cold Souls | Written and Directed by Sophie Barthes | with Paul Giamatti, David Strathairn, Dina Korzun, Katheryn Winnick, Lauren Ambrose, and Emily Watson | Samuel Goldwyn Films | 101 minutes
What if human souls were as interchangeable as hearts, kidneys, movie concepts, and auto parts? Writer/director Sophie Barthes's feature debut toys with the notion, but instead of breaking new ground, Cold Souls settles for rehashing elements from other films — like EternalSunshine of theSpotless Mind, Being John Malkovich, American Splendor, and Vanya on 42ndStreet.

Vanya gets tapped in the first scene as Paul Giamatti (played by himself) rehearses the climax of Chekhov's play, in which Vanya confronts his pointless mediocrity. Turns out Giamatti might be undergoing a similar crisis. In distress, he halts the performance and heads home to his long-suffering wife (Emily Watson, in what might be the most thankless role of the year) for some soul searching. Then, on a tip from his agent, he reads a New Yorker article about a new technology that just might solve his problem. Troubled souls, it turns out, can be extracted and preserved in a jar; their owners can then live their lives without spiritual complications. Me, I'd settle for Prozac. Nonetheless, Giamatti heads off to Roosevelt Island and a gleaming white "Soul Storage" facility, where he meets with the lubricious director, Dr. Flintstein (David Strathairn), whose name suggests the level of wit to follow.

Meanwhile, Nina (Dina Korzun, who steals the film) is doing some soul searching of her own. After passing through customs at Kennedy Airport with a fake passport and fingerprints, she too makes for Flintstein's office, where she drops something off. Returning to St. Petersburg, she solicits persons in soul-destroying jobs or lives of quiet desperation and persuades them to sell their souls. These are extracted, inserted into "mules" like Nina, and smuggled into the US, where they're delivered to Soul Storage and installed within soul-searching American clients. Poets' souls are especially in demand.

Giamatti finally does decide to have his own soul put on ice (it looks like a chickpea, one of the film's wearily recurring gags), and though he feels "empty," he also feels "great." But the operation has a bad effect on his portrayal of Vanya (though I liked the jaunty, mad-Hamlet spin he gives the character), so, fearing he might lose the part, he decides to sample a "Russian" soul to improve his performance. Surprise! — that soul proves even more burdensome than his own. Frustrated, he asks to have his back.

So, which is the problem, too much soul or too little? For Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, it's the latter, and it would seem so for Giamatti, as well. Why, then, would he dispose of the shrunken residue that he still possesses? Other unresolved issues that Barthes raises include the alienating effects of capitalism and the commodification of vicarious suffering.

But rather than examine the ramifications of soul trafficking, she takes refuge in a slapsticky sketch with ponderous literary allusions (Gogol's Dead Souls?) — the kind of half-baked thing Woody Allen might have abandoned in the '70s only to revive it decades later in Whatever Works. The moments when the film comes closest to touching the soul are the scenes in which Giamatti plays Vanya. Unfortunately, these are also the moments that remind you Barthes is no Charlie Kaufman — never mind Anton Chekhov.

Related: Review: Duplicity, Review: The Uninvited, Review: Anton Chekhov's The Duel, More more >
  Topics: Reviews , Celebrity News, Entertainment, Movies,  More more >
| More

ARTICLES BY PETER KEOUGH
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REVIEW: FOLLOW ME: THE YONI NETANYAHU STORY  |  May 29, 2012
    Whatever your opinion of the policies of Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, you can't deny that his brother Yoni was a hero, a courageous man whose conflicts and triumphs mirror those of his homeland.
  •   REVIEW: MOONRISE KINGDOM  |  May 31, 2012
    Wes Anderson should always make movies featuring characters who are pubescent or younger — like Rushmore , which until this film was his best.
  •   REVIEW: WHERE DO WE GO NOW?  |  May 22, 2012
    Lebanese director Nadine Labaki's whimsical film about internecine slaughter has a tone problem from the very start: a group of widows engage in a goofy line dance while the voiceover narrator bewails the death toll of religious warfare.
  •   REVIEW: MEN IN BLACK 3  |  May 24, 2012
    Griffin (Michael Stuhlbarg), a fifth dimensional alien, can see the infinite possibilities each moment possesses and the infinite contingencies that caused it to happen.
  •   INTERVIEW: RICHARD LINKLATER MESSES WITH TEXAS IN BERNIE  |  May 16, 2012
    No matter how far he strays, Richard Linklater's heart remains in Texas.

 See all articles by: PETER KEOUGH



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group