Remember
Me

The ending is one you will either love or hate, so put me in the hate
category. I hate the ending. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate
it. I hate it with the passion of 1000 burning suns. I hate it more
than Kim Basinger hates Alec Baldwin. I hate it more than Garfield
hates Mondays. Other than that, Remember
Me isn't so bad.
Set in 2001, Robert Pattinson stars as Tyler Hawkins - a brooding
introvert (Pattinson is good at that) haunted by his brother's suicide,
and at war with his rich, cold, uncaring father, Charles (Pierce
Brosnan). Come to think of it, Tyler hasn't met an authority figure he
doesn't loathe, so it's not a surprise when he ends up on the wrong
side of a hot headed cop, Neil Craig (Chris Cooper).
Before you know it, Tyler and his goofball best buddy, Aidan (Tate
Ellington), find out Craig's beautiful daughter, Ally (Emilie de
Raven), attends their college, and happens to have a class with our
favorite brooding introvert. While the intention of getting to know
Ally is murky at first, Tyler and the young co-ed soon start to fall
for each other, and try to confront the family problems each one
suffers with (and help bring a conclusion to his never ending
brooding).
Is it true love?
Will each one come to some sort of detente with their father?
Can they find a way to move on from the horrible losses in their lives?
If nothing else, Remember Me
gives those who are curious and the Twilight
fans a chance to see Pattinson more animated and alive than you have
ever seen him before. Best of all, the movie is not horrible.
Director Allen Coulter and writer Will Fetters shape Remember
Me into a movie that is better
at the
common scenes than the big climactic moments. When trying to hit the
highly emotional points, the movie tends to be out of control,
unbelievable and melodramatic, especially in scenes where Tyler is
supposed to be angry beyond belief. Coulter needs to step in, get
Pattinson to hold everything back a bit and make the anger feel real
(but Brosnan has the same problem in the same scene, so you can't blame
the actors completely).
Overall, Pattinson is good, but de Ravin is even better. In an era
where most young actresses have empty eyes that serve as a window into
their vapid, brainless souls (you can say the same about some pretty
boy actors (Paul Walker), too), de Ravin has intensity, emotion, hurt
and happiness that comes through on the screen perfectly. The two have
some good chemistry, which is a welcome relief, as is Fetters's ability
to weave in a few other plotlines to make Remember
Me about more than the sappy
romance.
Once all of the major plotlines have been wrapped up and you are ready
to put your coat on and leave the theater, Coulter and Fetters drop a
massive twist in your lap that is completely manipulative and
unnecessary. Without giving it away, we don't need something as massive
and huge to make the point. A smaller, more common ending would have
fit better into the movie, and been more palatable for the audience.
Aidan is used extensively for comic relief (most of which is funny), so
don't think you will go in and sit weeping for the entire film.
However, you might want to walk out before the ending makes you angry
as well.
Remember
Me is rated PG-13 for violence, sexual content, language and smoking.

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