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House of MirrorsBy Andy KleinPublished on December 02, 1998Shattered Image Opens Friday, Dec. 4, at the Galaxy. According to the sparse information available in standard reference books, Chilean expatriate director Raœl Ruiz, still in his late 50s, has made more than 100 films since 1960; apparently only 50 or so are features, but that's still an impressive stat. He's been a staple on the festival circuit for years, but until the release of Three Lives and Only One Death two years ago, his work almost never showed up anywhere else in the United States. Three Lives and Only One Death presumably got released here because it featured one of Marcello Mastroianni's final performances, but it turned out to be one of the best films of 1996 -- a thoroughly delightful experiment in narrative form that played on our deeply entrenched assumptions about film conventions. Shattered Image, Ruiz's latest, is his first film in English and the first to include an American "star" -- William Baldwin. Playing once again with our expectations, it's only slightly more conventional than Three Lives. As usual with Ruiz films, there's no way to even begin to describe the story without stepping on a few surprises, but Shattered Image is so rich that a synopsis won't destroy much of the movie's pleasure. To judge from the film's opening, audiences might think that they've accidentally stumbled into La Femme Nikita 2: Going Freelance! We see an all-dolled-up Anne Parillaud (who shot to fame as Nikita in Luc Besson's 1990 original) heading into the men's room of an upscale Seattle bar. After pausing briefly to observe her own multiple images on the mirror-lined walls, she pulls out a gun and coolly dispatches a man emerging from a stall. After she arrives back at her apartment, there is still little to suggest that this isn't a Nikita knockoff: She lives in a sterile loft with a cat that she just barely acknowledges. As she relaxes to watch TV, we hear a wild-eyed evangelist shouting, "Just what part of 'Thou shalt not kill' do you not understand?" Suddenly there is a loud noise and a jump-cut, and then we see Parillaud waking up with a start. She is on a plane to Jamaica. "I'm sorry. Just a bad dream," she explains to the flight attendant. She looks completely different -- fragile and human. "Aha!" we think. "It was all a joke: She was merely dreaming she was in La Femme Nikita!" Wrong. It's clear that the trip isn't merely a honeymoon. It's also part of Jessie's recovery from twin traumas: Her father has died recently, and she was raped in New York City. Brian rescued her after the attack, leading to their courtship. But Brian is an ambiguous character himself. As they make love in their room, he seems a little too violent; he has an icky predilection for grasping her throat in one hand. Jessie has a moment of fear, she looks over at the room's fish tank, and ... bam! With another loud noise she wakes up again in her apartment ... in Seattle. She is really the other Jessie -- Jessie the assassin -- dreaming she is a honeymooner in Jamaica. Maybe. Each Jessie thinks the other is a dream -- a nightmare, really. Newlywed Jessie is horrified by Killer Jessie's coldhearted violence. Killer Jessie tells her psychiatrist, "She is so weak. I hate that about her." Which Jessie is real? Which Jessie is Jessie? What (dare we ask) is reality? This might sound like pretentious Ingmar Bergman turf, but the film is primarily an entertaining thriller. Ruiz is too impish to fall into the heavy self-importance that Bergman, however brilliant, is prone to. The closest familiar comparison to Ruiz in Shattered Image would be Nicolas Roeg in films such as Don't Look Now and Cold Heaven. There are hints of The Wizard of Oz and Repulsion. There is even one moment just like (perish the thought!) I Still Know What You Did Last Summer.
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