Film Reviews
Clean
- Rating:

- Director: Oliver Assayas
- Starring: Beatrice Dalle
- Details: France / Canada / UK / 90 mins (15s).
When aging rocker Lee Hauser overdoses in a squalid motel in a small Canadian town, his wannabe rock star girlfriend Emily (Cheung) is arrested for possession of heroin. Sentenced to six months' imprisonment, Emily re-emerges to find she has lost her son Jay (Dennis), who is being looked after by his grandfather, Albrecht (Nolte), in Vancouver. Determined to get herself clean and prove herself a capable mother, Emily takes off for Paris and hooks up with record producer Elena (Dalle). Meanwhile, Albrecht brings his terminally ill wife Rosemary to London for specialised tests, raising Emily's hopes that she might soon see her son again. A fractured, meandering narrative does Clean no favours, particularly when Cheung (who won Best Actress at Cannes, surprisingly) seems to be performing at an emotional distance to the rest of the cast; while the role calls for a degree of detachment, Cheung is completely severed from whatever impulse drove director Assayas to make his movie, and she's also far too fresh-looking to be convincing as an ex-junkie. The real star is a scarecrow-like Nolte, even though he has the good grace to underplay whenever he shares a screen with Cheung; unfortunately, he retreats too far in order to allow her shine and virtually backs out of the movie. Bloodless, dispassionate and more concerned with its look than its feel, Clean is far too sterile for its own good.
Review by Declan Burke
DVD Reviews
The Descendants

When a film, especially a low key drama, is hyped up then there can be a certain level of disappointment in some quarters. Thankfully, Alexander Payne's first feature since the superb... [more]
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (2011)

Full disclosure: I have never read the books that this American-financed remake is based upon, nor have I seen the hugely successful Swedish productions that followed it. A classy production... [more]
Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol

Pixar stalwart Brad Bird makes his live-action feature debut with a franchise that has just had its most underrated installment. JJ Abrams' first film is almost vintage Cameron, and was a much... [more]
Your Comments