TV REVIEWS : ‘Blue River’ Flows With Brothers’ Painful Memories
The grimy derelict who shows up on a well-to-do doctor’s doorstep is no stranger; he’s the doctor’s estranged older brother, bringing a lifetime of painful memories. So begins “Blue River,†a fitfully interesting movie on Fox tonight.
Based on Ethan Canin’s novel, most of the film is a journey into the past, exploring the escalating events that culminated in a series of arson fires and the suicide of a disturbed teen-ager, driving the two brothers apart.
Jerry O’Connell (of Fox’s “Slidersâ€) is the film’s strength, giving a truthful performance as troubled, volatile Lawrence, shaped by his father’s desertion of the family and his too-intense protective feelings toward his mother.
Nick Stahl’s emotional remove, while distancing, works for the younger “good†brother, Edward, who is scarred in a different way.
Directed by Larry Elikann and written by Maria Nation, this trip back in time intends to plumb psychological depths but remains in the shallows, encumbered with a pervasive, artificial air of portent and unintentional stereotypes. Most regrettable of these are the boys’ Bible-quoting, born-again divorced mother (Susan Dey) and the town’s hypocritical moral and spiritual leader (Sam Elliott).
And the conclusion is a bit too reminiscent of the sentiment in a “reach out†phone commercial to resonate.
“Blue River†is the first movie under Fox’s “Hallmark Entertainment Presents†banner, intended to feature “edgy stories of families in crisis.â€
* “Blue River†airs at 8 tonight on Fox (Channel 11).
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