Receive Weekly Email and Text Message Updates:
Sign up for latest info on concerts, dining, promotions and more!
Go!

Related Stories ...

National Features >

  • City Pages

    Michele Bachmann, Unmuzzled

    You don't need to read Sarah Palin's book to hear the ravings of a mad woman.

    By Matt Snyders

  • Miami New Times

    Pimp Daddy

    The rise and fall of a chubby sex-cult leader.

    By Natalie O'Neill

  • Riverfront Times

    Babe 'n' Arms

    Tom was a hot-tempered cross-dresser with a garage full of guns--and then he became Rachel.

    By Nicholas Phillips

  • Dallas Observer

    The Fight for Texas

    Rick Perry and Kay Bailey Hutchison are locked in a battle over the soul of the GOP. They're also running for governor.

    By Sam Merten

88 Minutes

Share

  • rss

By ELLA TAYLOR

Published on April 15, 2008 at 4:52pm

Jon Avnet's cheesy new thriller is 105 minutes long, and I feared that 100 of them would be eaten up by Al Pacino chewing scenery. Alas, it's worse than that. Pacino again goes for world-weary, heavy-lidded ennui, this time as Jack Gramm, a Seattle forensic psychiatrist and professor in symbiotic thrall to the death-row serial killer (cyborgian Neal McDonough) he helped put away. Dark secrets flow out of Gramm's past in perfect parallel with the blood that pours out of the young female victims of a copycat killer. Gary Scott Thompson's screenplay is laughably expositor, and Avnet indulges in endless cutaways to the faces of various nubile adjuncts, frozen in attitudes of studied ambiguity. With its lumbering black humor and phony pretense to moral complexity, 88 Minutes is an ugly specimen. There is, however, one way in which the movie accidentally works like a charm — as a twisted essay on the aging man's fear of, and desire for, the young female body. We may have to sit through worse films this year, but with any luck, none will be as idiotically misogynist as this one.