|
Every
film-festival blurb I've seen for The Business of Strangers
hails the picture as a female version of Neil LaBute's In the
Company of Men, which kind of sucks because, if you've seen
that film, you'll have a pretty good idea how the twist at the
end will play out. I like to think of the film as more of a toned-down American
version of Baise-moi, which itself was a French porn
version of Thelma & Louise.
At
any rate, Strangers is about two women who do some pretty
awful stuff to a guy for a pretty shocking reason.
One of the women is Julie Styron (Stockard Channing, The
West Wing), a corporate executive who has sacrificed just
about everything in her personal life to bust through the glass
ceiling. When we
first meet Julie, she's having a not-so-great day on what seems
like an endless business trip.
For starters, she gets a call from the CEO's personal
assistant to set up a meeting later in the day with the big guy
himself. Then an
important sales presentation is hosed when Paula (Julia Stiles, O),
the company's "tech girl," arrives 45 minutes late
because of a flight delay.
Julie lashes out at
and fires Paula, who, without missing a beat, calls her superior
"über-frau" just before flipping her the bird.
Julie brushes the incident off because she's too busy
scheduling an impromptu meeting with a corporate headhunter
named Nick Harris (Fred Weller) in anticipation of her
engagement with the CEO, which she assumes will result in her
termination. But it
doesn't – instead, a stunned Julie is named as the replacement
for the retiring honcho.
Celebrating
in the bar of her hotel, Julie notices Paula and, feeling much
better at this point about her position in the world, walks over
and offers an apology for the incident earlier that day.
Paula stiffly brushes it off, saying she didn't really
need the job because her real ambition is to pursue a
non-fiction writing career. The two start to talk and slowly begin to warm to each
other's personalities. Julie,
a community-college graduate, is probably a little jealous of
Paula's spunky idealism, while Paula, a Dartmouth alum, might
just be a tad envious of the power-wielding perks that come with
ascending the corporate ladder as successfully as Julie has.
After
numerous drinks, a trip to the hotel's gym, pool and sauna, and
a very funny scene in an elevator packed with snickering men,
the women bump into headhunter Nick.
Paula begins to act a little oddly and later tells Julie
that Nick raped one of her best friends in college.
They decide to exact their revenge in a way that uniquely
blends humor and horror, but anyone familiar with cinema knows
there's more to the story than that.
Is Paula telling the truth about Nick?
Was it actually her that he raped?
Is she making the whole thing up out of sheer boredom?
Or is Paula just trying to get revenge on Julie for being
mean to her?
Set
over 24 hours, Strangers accurately portrays the
mind-numbing existences business travelers face during layovers.
Writer/director Patrick Stettner, making his feature-film
debut here, did a wonderful job of both carefully scripting the
dialogue and scouting boring, sterile corporate settings to
serve as the backdrop to the backstabbing.
Strangers is a very promising debut, but the
quality of Stettner's writing and directing is topped only by a
wonderful performance from Channing (easily her finest since Six
Degrees of Separation, and possibly her best ever).
| 1:24
– |
 |
for
strong language and some sexuality |
|