Stay
Stay takes place in the kaleidoscope of one man’s mind — an alternate world where the ghosts of the dead blend with the shells of the living and where nothing is as it seems.
We follow a
Sam’s life is complicated — he’s inherited patients from a fellow psychiatrist (Janine Garafalo) who’s had a mental breakdown of her own; he’s contending with his former patient and girlfriend (Naomi Watts) who, like Henry, is also a suicidal artist; and he sees dead people. As the hold on his own mind spirals out of control, we watch Sam’s world disintegrate in a surreal palette of colors, odd imagery, and inventive segues from one scene to another.
The suspenseful and often chilling Stay is almost like a cinematic version of a Salvadore Dali painting, but director Marc Forster admirably keeps himself from going over the top. Not that that wouldn’t have been fun too, but I like his choices — similar to films like Angel Heart, The Sixth Sense, The Usual Suspects and Memento, you want to watch Stay again as soon as it’s over so you can see how all the pieces came together. (But I must confess, one clue that gave the game away for me came too early on in the pic — however, when I later talked to someone who is not familiar with the rock group associated with that clue, he told me he wound up being surprised by the climax.)
McGregor is mesmerizing as Sam falls deeper into the rabbit hole, and Gosling’s often wrenching performance is reminiscent of great breakout roles like Edward Norton’s in Primal Fear.
It’s wonderful to see Forster stretch, grow and change as a director. Rather than cashing in on variations of his Academy Award hit (Best Actress, Best Screenplay) Monster’s Ball, he’s done a touching childhood fable in Finding Neverland, and now what is certainly the best psychological, mind-bending horror movie of the year in Stay (it’s everything The Jacket wanted to be, and wasn’t). Next up he’ll be tackling comedy with Will Ferrell in Stranger Than Fiction, and I’m sure he’ll be putting a distinctive twist on that genre as well.
Whether or not you’re surprised by the ending is neither here nor there — Stay is worth seeing for its powerful performances, excellent direction, and beautiful visuals.
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Reviewed by Staci Layne Wilson
Thank you, and sorry for the lateness of my reply. Wkipedia is your friend when it comes to stuff like this. Here's the lowdown on "Stay". [url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stay_[/url](film) "Stay" is out on DVD next week. I hope it gets the second chance it deserves. Best, Staci | |
03-17-2006 by stacilayne | discuss |
Great review, Staci. When I saw Mulholland Drive, I'm not embarrassed to admit that I required some answers, so I searched on the net and found a brilliant review/essay of the film explaining the significance of every valid scene in the film. Now I'm hunting for a similar 'essay' on STAY, and am having no luck. I adore this film, and have figured out most of the meanings, but there are still so many little things I would love to have explained so that the scenes in question have even more significance to me when I rewatch the film. Any ideas? Maybe you can point me in the right direction. By the way, the scene from the Shining which you've chosen as your avatar is one of the main scenes that creeped me out when I saw the film as an eleven year old! To this day I can't explain why. Take care | |
01-18-2006 by overlooker | discuss |