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White Light
(1990)
Director: Al Waxman
Cast: Martin Kove, Allison Hossack, Martha Henry
A movie with Al Waxman and with saxophones blaring on the soundtrack?
Must be a Canadian movie that's disguising itself as an American production.
Though this time, Waxman is behind the camera to direct his Cagney
and Lacey co-star in a supernatural mystery that, although nothing
really significant to go out of your way for, provides enough interest
to pass 90 or so minutes.
At the beginning of the movie, undercover cop Sean (Kove) finishes his
lengthy self-assigned assignment working undercover as the trusted confidant
for a local mobster, after unexpectedly a S.W.A.T. team bursts in, lead
by cops who were doing their own separate investigation. With all the evidence
he personally gathered, the evidence the other cops gathered, and believing
that all the mobsters friends were gathered up, he goes home later that
night believing he can put this all behind him. Arriving home, that confidence
is shattered when an unidentified man across the street blasts him with
a shotgun.
Things turn black....then the picture turns brighter to reveal the camera
moving along a round sewer tunnel into a white light. (I never knew the
journey to the afterlife is right under my street.) Sean then finds himself
in a house in a country with a woman named Rachel Rutlidge, who immediately
starts telling him how much she loves him. Initially confused, Sean falls
for her in a matter of seconds, leading to scenes you'd expect.
Back on earth, six hours have passed, and Sean's body is taken to the
morgue. Before the autopsy, the morgue attendants find a pulse, and Sean
is immediately taken to the hospital to be treated. His revival causes
his "spirit" to be pulled out of the dream world and back into his mortal
body. He's initially bewildered and a little upset, but later that night
when he rests, his dreams find him back in his "heaven". However, it is
not pleasant this time, for he sees Rachel Rutlidge shot, and she dies
in his arms. Subsequent nights, he keeps dreaming about her being shot
and killed.
Putting all that he knows of her, and what she's told him, Sean concludes
that it was no dream, and there was a real Rachel Rutlidge at one time,
but she was murdered. And in a bizarre coincidence, she was connected to
the case he was working on at the time - she being the plaything of the
mobster. When he's released from the hospital (looking like George Michael)
he gets a sketch made of her, using the description from his dreams, and
starts to search for what happened to her
Aside from a few silly parts, this premise was intriguing to me, and
I was curious to how it would be concluded. Indeed, there were some twists
along the way, and the pieces did seem to fall into place in the right
order. However, Waxman's direction - though nowhere terrible - lacks
emotion in key scenes. It's not that he didn't know how the "feel" of the
movie and the characters at each scene should be like; it's as if he did
know but wasn't sure how to do it. He drives at the speed we are walking,
instead of pulling us in and showing us what his vehicle will do.
And this is a problem when the climax starts to draw near. We've gathered
the pieces and placed them in the right order. Viewers of the movie will
understand
the explanations and will know why the characters acted that way
- but they won't really care one way or the other how the movie
ends. It doesn't help that the climax isn't really original at all.
Throughout White Light, there were a few things that managed
to always keep my interest up. One of them was Martha Henry giving an excellent
performance in the small but pivotal role as Ella, a near-death researcher
Sean meets at the hospital. She is cool and scientific, yet at the same
time having heart enough to be skeptical yet accepting of Sean's claims
of his afterlife experiences. And she happens to have an experimental near-death
drug in her basement laboratory....will she agree to let Sean use it to
"go back" for a few minutes? It sounds silly, but Henry's performance actually
manages to make the whole thing plausible.
I also liked the fact that Sean's policemen buddies don't fall into
the usual clichés when a cop in a movie makes weird requests or
claims. Here, they find his doings a little....strange...but anything to
help a buddy out.
It was also interesting to see a Canadian movie that didn't disguise
its origins for once. We see cops with Toronto police uniforms and police
cars, cars with Ontario license plates, and in one shot we even get to
see the CN Tower. However, you'll never hear the words "Toronto", "Ontario",
or any other (non fictional) place in Canada. I guess we still have a long
way to go until we can convince Canadians and non-Canadians to watch distinctively
Canadian movies. This is about as close as you get, folks.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also: Deadline,
For A Few Lousy
Dollars, Sunday In
The Country
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