Movie Reviews
The Watcher (2000) Movie Information:
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The Watcher (2000) Synopsis:
FBI agent Joel Campbell has gone into hiding. Traumatized and beaten down after years of pursuing psychotic killers in Los Angeles, he is trying to carve a new, less stressful, life for himself in Chicago. But his guilty past follows him. He has only been in Chicago for a few months when there is a rash of gruesome murders, all of which follow a sickeningly familiar pattern: They are undoubtedly the work of one man - David Allen Griffin. The cunning and tormenting Griffin prodded and eluded Campbell for years in Los Angeles. And now he has pursued his tracker to Chicago. For Griffin, the vicious, merciless killing of lonely young women has merely become a pretext for a sadistic game of cat and mouse game between himself and Campbell. Before each murder he sends the FBI agent a photograph of his intended victim and dares him to find her before he strikes again.
The Watcher (2000) Movie Review:
I think we maybe need a bit of history on this movie before we delve into the main part of the review. Keanu Reeves signed up to make this movie long before the success of The Matrix put him right back up on top in the money and credibility stakes. When he signed up he was apparently under the impression that it was an indie movie and his role was pretty much a cameo role and to add some breadth to his range. He even signed on for scale wages to help the movie get made.
Something happened inbetween him signing on to the movie and the start of production. Both Maria Tomei and James Spader signed onto the movie, and they got signed up at a cool million dollars each. How I'm sure you'll agree Keanu Reeves is a much bigger box office draw than either of them. Now I think I may be comfortable in thinking that Keanu may have thought that the other actors involved may have been signed up for scale wages as well. Well it appears he was not informed correctly. Oh yeah and most importantly because three largeish names were signed up the makers decided instead of making it as an indie project, they would turn it into a slasher pic!
Now personally if I had been Keanu Reeves I would have bailed out of the project, sounds like they screwed him about a bit. But as we all know after the fiasco Kim Basinger went through after Boxing Helena its a lot harder for a star to bail out of a prject if they have a watertight contract already signed. Well he went ahead and made the movie, but he did no press and is featured nowhere on the advertising either. That doesn't bode well does it considering he has quite happily plugged and had his picture all over some utter dreck before.
So after that little bit of background info you have probably already guessed that this movie isn't high art, more lowest common denominator, bums on seat, formula nonsense, and you'd be right on that.
James Spader plays a cop who years ago wasn't able to catch a serial killer. The case gets closed and Spader moves on to another town. Well the serial killer reappears and decides to play about with Spader's character and issues him a challenge to catch him before he kills the next victim.
Now the premise sounds at least halfway interesting, but its the shoddy lazy way it has been executed that messes everything up. Everything feels contrived and cliched. Bits and pieces are dropped into the plot hither and tither to try and join up the seams of a leaky plot. Subtlety is not a concern of this movie.
The performances are also pretty woeful, Keanu appears bored throughout and he seems to go through the motions as if he grudged doing the movie. This is a shame, yeah sure he wanted out of the project, but we all have to do things we don't like in life, but surely we should all try and give our best? James Spader's performance is pretty wooden and he looks as if he narcolepsy he looks so sleepy and disinterested throughout. Very little to say about Marisa Tomei as she is only in a total of four scenes, whether this is because they ended up on the cutting room floor I have no idea.
The Watcher (2000) review written by: Gary Gray