
Whether by dint of nature, nurture, or nepotism, Jennifer Lynch's small resume to date hasn't fallen far from the paternal tree. Tie-in novel The Secret Diary of Laura Palmer annotated Twin Peaks, doing a good job too, even if one still better left to your own vile imagination. That series' Sherilyn Fenn wound up starring (after Madonna, and then Kim Basinger, famously dropped out) in 1993's Boxing Helena, a "controversial" amour fou tale somehow much more intriguingly offensive in anticipation than actuality.
After a very long unexplained hiatus, Lynch is back with her second feature as writer-director. Surveillance again drafts talent from dad's stable, notably Bill Pullman, star of 1997's Lost Highway. And again, there's a certain hollow jonesing after shock value, where David's cinematic heart of darkness always seemed both frighteningly real and unpinnable. Yet modern desert noir reveling in nastiness, Surveillance does have its sardonic pulp satisfactions.
FBI agents Pullman and Julia Ormond arrive at a dusty rural police station to investigate two murky incidents producing a lot of fresh corpses. Sole survivors are one precocious little girl (Ryan Simpkins), one still-high skank (Pell James), and one very defensive patrolman (co-scenarist Kent Harper).
While their sometimes fibby testimonies are teased out what really happened being revealed in flashback three more bodies turn up in grotesque tableau at a nearby motel. Plus, authorities are on high alert for a natural-born thrill-killing couple on the loose, precise whereabouts unknown.
At its core, Surveillance is just cruel, without any true empathy or moral weight attached. But it's also just clever enough to invite re-viewing, no matter how far off you spy the big twist coming. Lynch has honed her directing chops; things rumble and explode with precision, no matter that credibility wobbles ever wider like an ill-bolted wheel. Some unexpected names (Cheri Oteri, French Stewart) blend seamlessly into a sharp ensemble. With this Jennifer Lynch starts to be interesting on her own even more since her already-wrapped next, Hisss, is an India-shot horror fantasy based on local mythology. Which, at last, is a project one can't even imagine David Lynch doing.
SURVEILLANCE opens Fri/3 in Bay Area theaters.
Also from this author
Michael Glawogger wraps up his 'globalization trilogy' with a look at the world's oldest profession
Aleksei Guerman's five films (from the past 45 years) screen at YBCA
YBCA feeds the Possession obsession with a tribute to the Polish director
Also in this section
Michael Glawogger wraps up his 'globalization trilogy' with a look at the world's oldest profession
A true-crime tale inspires Richard Linklater's cheerful new black comedy
Short takes on SFIFF 2012, week two
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- I can't believe that a topic this dull and trivial has gotten 39 - May 24, 2012
- Thanks, Willie, for those - May 24, 2012
- I returned to the Task Force - May 24, 2012
- HIPAA experts - May 24, 2012
- There are plenty of suburbs - May 24, 2012
- Leave it to Dnative to show up on the wrong side of things - May 24, 2012
- OMG- Gay cruising endangered in the Park! - May 24, 2012
- Save the fellatio! There - May 24, 2012
- i saw nick play in his old - May 24, 2012
- The 1% want this and the 1% - May 24, 2012










