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- Lights Out Movie Reviews
- Copyright (c) 1994, Bruce Diamond
- All rights reserved
-
-
- ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ SERIAL MOM: Written & directed by John Waters. Star- │
- │ ring Kathleen Turner, Sam Waterston, Ricki Lake, │
- │ Suzanne Somers, Mink Stole, Matthew Lillard, Mary Jo │
- │ Catlett, Justin Whalen, and Patricia Hearst. Savoy │
- │ Pictures. Rated R. │
- └───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- You've thought about it, 'fess up. The driver who cuts you
- off. The neighbor whose dog thinks your lawn is a toilet. The
- drunk at the end of the bar. Your ex-spouse. Barney. For the
- briefest of instants, you want that sucker stone-cold, stiff-as-
- a-board, deader-than-a-doornail wormfood. Then the moment passes
- and you snap back to what passes for reality in your world.
- That's the premise behind John Waters' cathartically-dark comedy,
- SERIAL MOM, starring Kathleen Turner.
-
- We've seen Turner this starkly dangerous before, in WAR OF
- THE ROSES, 1989. In fact, she was more menacing in that film,
- though she only kills one person, and that through mutual effort.
- In SERIAL MOM, though, Turner mows down several people (you'll
- find yourself cheering more often than not, which is Waters'
- intent, and part of his wry commentary), all the while grinning
- her eerie June Cleaver grin and cheerfully recycling household
- items to Barry Manilow tunes. She's the model mom, all right,
- but modeled after the likes of Charles Manson, Ted Bundy, and
- John Wayne Gacy. She's a Henrietta Lee Lucas, a Joan Wayne Gacy,
- as the prosecutor tags her at the final reel trial. Yes,
- unfortunately, she is caught and arrested, but not until after
- she's racked up an impressive body count, is chased out of a
- church service, and is hidden by her son (Matthew Lillard), who
- thinks his mom is 'way cool because she's a serial killer.
-
- Sam Waterston and Ricki Lake (who got her start in a John
- Waters film, HAIRSPRAY, 1988) also star as Turner's husband and
- daughter, who can't reconcile their sweet, loving, bird-watching
- Beverly with the vicious murderer depicted in the media. For
- most of the movie, Beverly dispatches people she more or less
- knows: her son's math teacher, her husband's patients, her
- daughter's unfaithful boyfriend, and so on. It's when she goes
- after a stranger that her world begins to unravel. You'd never
- know it to look at her in the beginning moments of SERIAL MOM --
- she's the model homemaker, serving breakfast to her family in
- full Donna Reed dress. When cops show up at the Sutphin door,
- investigating obscene phone calls made to a neighbor, we get our
- first inkling of just how twisted Beverly could be.
-
- Turner's broad, hammy style works well here, although she's
- a might *too* artificial in the opening scenes, as is the rest of
- the family. They know they're lampooning the '50s suburban
- sitcoms, and it shows in their empty smiles and studied
- mannerisms. Turner was more natural, and as mentioned before,
- more natural in WAR OF THE ROSES, but as the film progresses,
- everyone relaxes into their roles, and the farcical elements
- become supplanted by a clever commentary on the cult of
- celebrity. Martin Scorsese made this same point more deftly a
- decade ago in THE KING OF COMEDY, 1983, but Waters manages to
- update the message (yes, things have changed that much in ten
- years) into a sly entertainment for today's audiences.
-
- RATING: $$$
-
-