Leaving
Las Vegas (1995)
Rated R
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Elisabeth Shue,
and Julian Sands
Rating:

out
of

|
Whew! Having heard reviewers
sing its praises and watching Nicolas Cage receive the Best Actor Academy
Award in 1996 for this performance was
not enough to prepare me for the experience of watching Leaving Las
Vegas.
The only word that I can use to describe the experience is "haunting."
Ben Sanderson (Nicolas Cage) has lost his job at a Hollywood talent agency.
It's the last straw in what seems to be a string of failures in his life.
His family, a wife and son, have also gone. Just how they disappeared
isn't made clear, but the effect on Ben is apparent: he's drinking hard
and heavy. After losing his job, he decides to drive to Las Vegas, sell
his belongings for booze money and drink himself to death.
Shortly after arriving in Las Vegas, he meets Sera (Elisabeth Shue),
a prostitute who immediately finds herself attracted to him. After her
pimp (Julian Sands) is killed, she takes Ben in and attempts to fill a
need in her life much like Ben fills his needs with alcohol.
The movie boils down to a tragic character study of Ben and Sera's effect
on one another. Each provides what the other needs: acceptance. Sera promises
Ben that she will not ask him to stop drinking. Ben accepts the fact that
she's a hooker.
The performances are absolutely top-flight. Cage looks convincingly out-of-it
while still maintaining a subtle consciousness of how pathetic his character's
become. Shue proves that she's above such drivel as Cocktail and Adventures
in Babysitting.
So, with all of this praise, why did it only receive 4 stars? Well, some
of the things the movie asks you to accept don't slide down the gullet
as nicely as the filmmaker's may have wanted them to. The most disturbing
of which is the amount of booze Ben drinks. If Ben ingested as much alcohol
as is shown, he'd be dead in the first ten minutes of the film. He downs
entire bottles of hard liquor in several gulps. He'd do more than simply
stagger after that; he'd expire.
Technicalities aside, Leaving
Las Vegas is a powerful exploration of
the needs of two tragic people. Ben and Sera are two of the most engaging
characters I've encountered in the movies in a long time. I appreciated
the fact that their rough edges were not polished in typical Hollywood
fashion and they remained complex and haunted, much like the type of people
they're based on. Trivia: John
O'Brien, who wrote the semi-autobiographical book that the movie is
based on, committed suicide two weeks after selling the rights to
his work. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |