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Dragonfly (2002)

Dragonfly
"I just can't seem to get anything to fly."

Starring:

Kevin Costner

Released By:

Universal

Released In:

2002

Rated:

PG-13

Reviewed By:

Adam Mast

Grade:

D

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I really enjoyed The Sixth Sense, but am quite tired of all the pale imitators. Dragonfly is just such an also ran.

In Dragonfly, Kevin Costner plays Dr. Joe Darrow, a man mourning the death of his wife. It seems, however, that the late Mrs. Darrow is reaching for Joe from beyond the grave via strange occurrences involving child patients at the hospital, and a mysterious shape that resembles a dragonfly. Is Joe crazy, or are these visions he is experiencing, real. I'm not about to tell you. but I will say that the journey to the answer isn't nearly as intriguing as it thinks it is.

Dragonfly was directed by Tom Shadyac, a film maker known for spastic Jim Carrey vehicles. He seems out of his element here. While the Zucker Brothers (Airplane, The Naked Gun) enjoyed success with Ghost, Shadyac has no such luck. Dragonfly comes across as tedious rather than interesting.

A big problem here is Kevin Costner. No offense, but could this guy be any more dull? Back in the day, Costner's strongest attribute seemed to be the ability to pick good projects. With terrific films like The Untouchables and Field of Dreams, Costner became a major power player despite his lack luster performances. That's because those films were about collaboration. It seems as of late, this guy wants to control the show even when he's not directing and it really comes across in his work. That's not to say Costner is horrible in every film. He does, however, come across as one note. In Dragonfly, the audience must be willing to follow Darrow on his journey. Unfortunately, Costner isn't convincing so the movie seems silly instead of captivating.

Shadyac's attempt at haunting cinema is a major misfire. He tries to build tension by subjecting the audience to strange phenomena, but none of it ever amounts to anything, despite an interesting and slightly unexpected ending.

Dragonfly deals with themes of love, loss and death, but it's lack of dramatic scope keep it from reaching it's goal. Instead, the movie tries to weird the audience out. It fails on that level as well.

:: zBoneman.com Reader Comments ::

Stephanie

Stephanie

I will have to give your review a F I found Dragonfly quite entertaining.

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