TV GUIDE REVIEW OF "MR STITCH"
August, 1996.
Director:
Roger Avary, 1996
Cast: Wil Wheaton, Rutger Hauer, Nia Peeples, Ron Perlman
An imaginative
variation on the Frankenstein story, MR. STITCH stretches its low
budget with commendable facility.
In a
secret underground lab, a team of scientists led by Dr. Rue Wakeman
(Rutger Hauer) has created a patchwork man (Wil Wheaton) out of body
parts from 88 different individuals. Psychiatrist Dr. Elizabeth English
(Nia Peeples) is brought in to orient this creation, who, after reading
the Bible, chooses to call himself Lazarus. Lazarus begins to bond
with Dr. English, but also becomes tormented by visions--memories,
it turns out, from his many "donors." When Dr. Wakeman decides that
Dr. English has gotten too close to Lazarus, she is removed from the
project, inspiring Lazarus to escape from the lab. Eluding armed pursuers,
Lazarus visits a woman whose husband and son--two of his donors--were
killed in a car accident, to tell her that her husband and son still
love her. He then finds his way to Dr. English's apartment, where
he reveals that another of his donors was her former lover, Dr. Frederick
Texarian (Ron Perlman), a scientist colleague who was killed when
he tried to stop Wakeman's project. Lazarus, it turns out, was intended
to be a supersoldier, and he realizes that there's only one way to
end the experiments. Returning to the lab, he confronts General Hardcastle
(Michael Harris), the project's military backer, and kills both the
general and himself.
MR. STITCH
signals a new direction for writer-director Roger Avary, who co-wrote
PULP FICTION (1994) and helmed the similarly themed KILLING ZOE (1994).
By eschewing the in-your-face violence and camerawork of his previous
movies, Avary has crafted a spare, frequently almost surreal film.
A good deal of the story takes place in the sterile, white, dimensionless
lab space, empty save for Lazarus, his occasional visitors, some simple
furniture, and a large, floating eyeball that watches over him (a
nifty computer-generated effect). Yet the film never becomes monotonous;
Avary keeps the drama building as Lazarus discovers truths about himself
and develops genuine feelings for Dr. English. While the performances
are uneven, the central emotions ring true, anchored by the empathetic
performance of Wheaton (even under his very convincing, multi-colored
skin makeup by Tom Savini). And when the action moves outside the
lab, Avary serves up a genuinely exciting car chase. The fact that
some of the soldiers pursue Lazarus in what look like souped-up go-carts
is all of a piece with Avary's off-kilter visual style, which succeeds
through the confidence and coherence he has applied to it.
Originally
developed as a pilot for a television series, MR. STITCH had a troubled
production history (evidenced by its lack of a producer credit), culminating
with Hauer walking off the film midshoot. The result is that Lazarus
confronts General Hardcastle instead of Dr. Wakeman at the climax,
and this incongruity--coupled with Harris's overacting--makes the
ending something of a letdown after the compelling 90 minutes preceding
it.
Country
of origin: U.S.; France
Genre:
Science Fiction; Thriller
Production
Co(s).: Studio Megaboom; Rysher Entertainment
Released
by: WarnerVision
* * * *
In the same issue of the TV Guide, there was also
a short piece advertising the movie which said, "It's no surprise
that after playing leonine man-beast Vincent in the CBS cult
fave "Beauty and the Beast," Ron Perlman would be in a modern-day
retelling of Frankenstein; the Sci Fi Channel movie "Mr
Stitch" (August 17). What is surprising is that it's Star
Trek: The Next Generation's Wil Wheaton who's the monster this
time. Perlman portrays an idealistic scientist."
* * * *