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Stay is not a violent film. Theres only a single,
very effective moment of mayhem and thats conveyed mainly through sound effects and
camera angles rather than extended, wincing shots of gore. But, from the first few
moments, the viewer is shown a version of New York City where every light is harsh, every
surface hard, every edge dangerous. Metal, glass, broad barren wooden floors, and
impossibly long, Escher-like staircases enclose the characters in a world where nothing
quite makes sense. The result is a movie that very quickly gets under your skin and stays
there.
The plot is deceptively simple. Ewan McGregor plays Sam Foster, a
psychiatrist determined to prevent art student Henry Letham (Ryan Gosling) from committing
suicide. Henry is a waifish, plainly disturbed young man who insists Sams blind
mentor, Leon (Bob Hoskins) is his own dead father, and who keeps uttering apparently
senseless, but weirdly predictive phrases ("I didnt move them. I know
youre not supposed to
") that turn up later in the mouths of other
characters. As time passes and Foster becomes increasingly obsessed with saving Henry, the
line between the two men becomes blurred. Is Henry Letham actually Sam Foster, or is
Foster actually Lethem? Whose dream or hallucination is this? Is one of these men dead?
Are both?
Horror and fantasy aficionados will recognize this plot device from
other films. Movies as varied as Jacobs
Ladder, The
Machinist, American
Psycho, and more venerable classics like The
Innocents and Robert Wises The
Haunting, to varying degrees, have invited the audience to second guess the
reliability of the protagonists. This does not make Stay any less disturbing.
Nobody in the audience is going to jump in their seats and scream every few minutes, but
the sense of dread, of someone slowly and unwillingly approaching an unbearable truth,
sets in like a chill, especially in the wonderfully stark, ghostly scene where Sam
interviews Henrys mother (Kate Burton) in an empty house.
Ewan McGregor and Ryan Gosling give a fascinating, pas-de-deux of a
performance, in which Sams grip on the bizarre reality of the film becomes
increasingly tenuous while Henrys becomes increasingly sure if no less
suicidal. Naomi Watts is Lila, Sams artist girlfriend whose wrists are still
horribly scarred from her own attempt at suicide, and Elizabeth Reaser is Athena, an
aspiring actress who may or may not be Henry Lethems girlfriend.
Janine Garofolo offers an effective turn as the surprisingly punkish and self-destructive
therapist who had passed Henrys case over to Sam, and as Leon, Bob Hoskins
performance veers from the avuncular, to the belligerent, to a moment of joy and delight
that saves the viewer from coming away with a sense of utter hopelessness.
But its Director Marc Foster (Monster's Ball, Finding Neverland), Director of
Photography Roberto Schaefer, and visual effects designer Kevin Tod Huag who truly deserve
credit for creating a hallucinogenic dreamscape of a city thats as compelling as the
characters. Stay is not for everyone. Fans looking for a traditional carnival
ride of a horror film are likely to be disappointed. But for those in the mood for more
cerebral fare, this film will be a richly detailed, fascinating, and insightful puzzle
that should prompt many to go back for a second look.
- Pamela Troy