Ice Storm, The (1997)

reviewed by
Dennis Schwartz


ICE STORM, THE (director: Ang Lee; screenwriter: James Shamus; cinematographer: Frederick Elmes; cast: Kevin Kline (Ben Hood), Sigourney Weaver (Jane Carver), Joan Allen (Elena Hood), Jamey Sheridan (Jim Carver), Christina Ricci (Wendy Hood), Elijah Wood (Mikey Carver), Adam Hann-Byrd (Sandy Carver),Tobey Maguire (Paul Hood), 1997)

Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz

The story takes place in the wealthy WASPish 'burb of New Canaan, Connecticut, on Thanksgiving week, 1973, when there is an ice storm and a catastrophe is to follow that shakes up this bourgeois town. It is through the eyes of two families who are friends and neighbors that we follow the events leading up to the tragedy. Ben (Kline) and Elena Hood (Joan), their children, the sexually curious Wendy (Ricci), 14 and the preppie Paul (Tobey), 16; the other family consists of Jane (Sigourney) and Jim Carver (Jamey), their boys, the brilliant high school student Mikey (Elijah) and the younger son, the troubled and introverted Sandy (Adam).

This is played out against the negativity of the current Nixon administration, with some of the teens reflecting their parents' conservative political views and others vehemently on opposite sides of their parents.This is also a film about the parents' dissatisfaction with their empty lives, as they grumble about what they perceive to be missing in their lives. This dissatisfaction makes it possible for an affair between Ben and Jane to take place. But even that affair is stale (after he can't stop talking in bed and she chillingly tells him to keep quiet, "You are boring me, I have a husband and I don't need another one").

The lives of the children are scrutinized in the same way their parents' lives are, and the results are almost identical. The children, despite their discontentments with the outside world, are almost mirror images of their empty parents, unwilling to be honest with themselves, or too honest with themselves for their own good. Meanwhile, the revolutionary spirit of the times seems to be passing them by. Tobey struggles to relate with girls, as he is awkward, unsure of what to do or say. He is at the phase of his life where he is experimenting with drugs in the stupidest of ways; Wendy is unwisely looking to explore sex, but unaware of the consequences of her decisions; Mickey is reckless and unsure of how to handle his playful sense of adventure and freedom; Sandy is all bottled-up inside, wanting to love and be loved, while at the same time full of anger.

The introduction of nature into their lives brings about a stark reality, in the form of the Thanksgiving ice storm. The ice storm is magnificently opulent in its whitish, blueish, and gray colors (the ice was artificially made, but it looks only too real). It symbolically represents the truth that can't be denied, no matter what games the adults (wife-swapping) and children (touching their private parts) play. The beauty of the ice storm is even more menacing and attractive when it is added to the more placid beauty of the town's countryside; but it is also dangerous, as we see how the one surbanite truly influenced by the beauty of the storm, also succumbs to it.

It is amazing that this film was made by a foreigner, who is able to get into some of the nuances that pricked the skin of those living through those times (It still surprises me, though Hollywood has a rich history of foreigners doing just that, examples would be, messieurs Lang and Sirk). Lee was born in Taiwan and did not live here until 1978, yet he is able to capture a slice of what it was like here in the early '70s, and what it was like to be a rich American in the middle of great social change.

The characters are intricately drawn together, but each is complex and not reduced to being a caricature. Kline's performance is central to the film, he reflects on who he thinks he is supposed to be while his marriage has gone cold.While Ricci's performance is simply breathtaking in its verve, as she appears to be the only one of the teen group who really feels what is going on politically and socially.

These are successful people, and there is a reason why they are successful, and for all the holes in their life, we see how they are able to go after what they want and get it, the only thing that seems to be alluding them and out of their reach, is gaining peace of mind.

This film is to be admired for its vividly icy observations of suburban life, letting us clearly see the intensity and restlessness that lies behind the carefully manicured personas of the rich. Its use of the ice storm's raw power, in all its beauty and danger, as a metaphor on the dysfunctionality of the characters, were both well-utilized and, at the same time, utilized too much. The ice storm came to symbolize what can so easily be taken away from any one, in one rapid moment, if one is not prudent or careful in their life. The film can be slightly faulted for putting too much weight on the ice storm and its symbolical message, and for trying to make too much of the comparison between the children and the parents, thereby not doing enough justice to either, as the characterizations tended to appear to be too forced into fitting in with the metaphor of the ice storm.

REVIEWED ON 9/23/98                 GRADE: B

Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"

http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ


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