Jonathan Kaplan's "Brokedown Palace" feels throughout like an outline for a
movie--one that has been scrupulously planned out, to be sure--rather than
one that has an actual screenplay. Far too reminiscent of 1998's "Return to
Paradise" to feel the least bit fresh, the film is often uninvolving and
needlessly simplistic, with the characters' motivations severely muddled. As
opposed to "Return to Paradise," which was a thought-provoking, complex
drama, "Brokedown Palace" never really allows you to satisfactorily connect
with the two central characters, and their harsh surroundings are portrayed
in such a bare-bones light, that when the somewhat unpredictable ending
arrives, you come out feeling a tad more indifferent to the whole ordeal than
the filmmakers probably wanted you to.
Recent high school graduates and lifelong best friends Alice (Claire Danes)
and Darlene (Kate Beckinsale) are planning to take a trip to Hawaii together,
but while at a party, they catch word on the more-appealing Third World
country of Thailand, which is so cheap that the hotel rooms cost only six
dollars a night. "Besides," says the more rebellious Alice, in narration,
"Thai means freedom, which was the exact thing we were looking for." At first
enjoying themselves in Bangkok, they soon have a chance encounter with the
engaging, handsome Australian, Nick Parks (Daniel Lapaine), after almost
getting caught sneaking into a ritzy hotel and hanging out at the swimming
pool, putting their drinks on other peoples' tabs. Inviting both Alice and
Darlene to fly to Hong Kong and meet him a day after he leaves for there on
business, they agree to, but while at the airport awaiting to board the
plane, are abruptly accosted by the police, who find bags of narcotics in
Alice's bag. Thrown into a dehumanizing, roach-infested prison, both girls
firmly claim that they have no idea how the drugs got into her backpack, and
after receiving a bogus sentence of 33 years each, they enlist the aid of
supposed-to-be-fabulous lawyer "Yankee" Hank Green (Bill Pullman), an
American himself who knows all about the strict Thai laws, to help get them a
second hearing.
"Brokedown Palace" would have what it takes to be highly-charged, moving
motion picture if not for two setbacks: the release of the superior "Return
to Paradise" last year, and the lackluster screenplay by David Arata.
Particularly in the first half-hour, the dialogue between the two best
friends, which is a vital relationship that is not developed nearly enough,
seems to have been cut to a minimum, with their few-and-far-between lines
improvised--none to well--on the spot. Whether this is the case or not, the
script could have benefitted from an extensive rewrite in order to strengthen
the characters and depict the prison experience in a more raw, gritty light.
As is, the film is akin to a tablet of cliffs notes, rather than getting us
involved in the full experience. The brutality of the Thai prisons does not
give us a large enough taste of its harshness, nor are Alice and Darlene
instructed to react in a fully believable manner, considering that they are
facing almost their whole lives in prison for something they were not even
involved in.
The sympathy that we do develop for Alice and Darlene mostly owes itself to
the young, talented actress' performances. Claire Danes, in my mind, has been
someone to look out for ever since her star-making turn on the best
television series of the decade, "My So-Called Life," but with her
involvement in this film and last spring's "The Mod Squad," she needs to be
more choicy on the projects she makes. Equalling Danes in every way is the
British Kate Beckinsale who, with 1998's sparkler, "The Last Days of Disco"
and here, is able to pull off a near-perfect American accent, and seems to
fully embody every one of her characters, even when they are as underwritten
as this picture.
Holding no such close scrutiny is the subplot involving Hank Green and his
transformation from a determined lawyer in it for the money, into a more
compassionate soul. Hank's cause for inner change is never really vindicated,
and his relationship with his wife, Yon (Jacquelyn Kim), couldn't have
possibly been any more thinly-written. Bill Pullman makes no impression in
this other major role in the film, as he simply goes through the well-worn
paces without any distinguishable character traits.
If too flawed to be recommended, "Brokedown Palace" still is not without its
merits. Aside from the performances by Danes and Beckinsale, the one powerful
sequence in the film arrives midway through, when Darlene's father arrives at
the prison, along with all of the other visitors, and we watch as the
prisoners and their free family and friends must yell back and forth amidst a
wire fence and a long space in between them. The scene jumps out at the
viewer because it is the one moment that feels completely authentic, and is
emotionally devastating just from the thought that that space in between the
imprisoned and the visitors is their path to freedom, if only they could
reach it.
Attempting to have its cake and eat it too, director Kaplan has devised an
infuriating ending that is both downbeat and upbeat at the same time, which,
no doubt, left a sour taste in my mouth. Being very vague about the
particulars of the conclusion, the last image we are shown is of someone
smiling, which, sorry to say, is an outrageous strain for a falsely happy
ending and doesn't even make much sense when you stop to think about it. What
one of the characters does in this final act is a courageous act, but it also
doesn't sit well with what we already know about the character, and the fact
that this person smiles is ludicrous. "Brokedown Palace" yearns to be a
meaningful morality tale about two teenagers who don't realize what they've
got until it's gone, but what it really is is a glossy Hollywoodization of a
serious subject that is as far from the bright lights of Hollywood as could
possibly be.
Copyright © 2000 Dustin Putman