Femme Fatale returns De Palma to his favored genre with a film that explores revenge and reinvention, flavored with an undercurrent of moral ambiguity and titillating corruption. A contemporary film noir about an alluring seductress suddenly exposed to the world – and her enemies – by a voyeuristic photographer who becomes ensnared in her surreal quest for revenge, Femme Fatale draws stars Rebecca Romijn-Stamos and Antonio Banderas together in De Palma's licentiously complex narrative.[TRAILER]


STEVEN SNYDER'S REVIEW

As its title all but proclaims, “Femme Fatale” is constructed around one central, fascinating female character, Laura Ash (Rebecca Romijn-Stamos). As in all noir films, Laura is the standard femme fatale archetype; a hard-edged woman who refuses to conform to female stereotypes, is seen as a threat by men for her intelligence and shrewdness, and uses her sexuality to manipulate those around her.

To appreciate “Femme Fatale,” one must first be intrigued by this dark, seductive and mysterious heroine. To this end, writer and director Brian De Palma (“The Untouchables”) constantly reinvents her. Laura is initially one member in a group of thieves at the Cannes Film Festival, set on stealing jewels from a gorgeous French film actress. Far from a team player, she double-crosses her partners within “Femme Fatale’s” first fifteen minutes. Then, almost killed for her betrayal, Laura drops out of sight for seven years, reappearing, ironically, as a sweet, innocent French wife.

It is in this chapter that Laura meets Nicolas (Antonio Banderas), a photographer who has threatened her life by snapping her photo. In a surprising, but completely believable twist, Laura morphs from sweet to sour, from an innocent wife to a manipulating temptress, as her new plan involving Nicolas is finally revealed.

“Femme Fatale” is an obvious tribute to the great film noirs of the past. It opens with Laura watching “Double Indemnity,” perhaps the greatest of all film noirs, and “Femme Fatale” toys with similar themes of temptation, betrayal, and shrouded motivation. It opens with an audacious heist, ends with one hell of a surprise ending, and in between creates scenes that are completely unpredictable.

The movie works because De Palma never penetrates the bubble of mystique surrounding Laura. He allows her to remain elusive and tantalizing, constantly changing her identity, and De Palma employs numerous shifts in time and location so that the very reality of her situation is called into question. Is she dreaming? Is this the “real” Laura, or is she pretending? Like all engaging femme fatales, Laura propels the story through the audience’s desire to discover not the fate of the diamonds, but the truth about her.

Sadly, this does not have much to do with the film’s performances. Banderas seems blank and impassive, present merely as an observer, and Romijn-Stamos, while jaw-dropping, heart-pounding beautiful, brings little more to her role than that inherent beauty.

The catch? It doesn’t matter. De Palma has written and crafted a thriller so inspired as a mystery that the performances are obscured by the spectacle. “Femme Fatale’s” dialogue is stripped down to the essentials, its story being moved forward instead by sexual tension, plot twists, and creative camera techniques, notably De Palma’s use of split screen to direct the audience’s attention and construction of the Cannes heist as more silent film than Hollywood blockbuster.

But in a disastrous third act, “Femme Fatale’s” more enjoyable moments are eviscerated by the film’s final surprise. One monstrous twist too many and De Palma seems to apologize for his earlier, edgier decisions. Laura is absolved of her provocative behavior, and her elaborate mystery that will compel so many viewers to remain glued to the screen ends in absurdity.

Despite its flaws, “Femme Fatale” is enticing filmmaking. It teases, surprises, and confuses. Too bad it also sells out.





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