One
Hour Photo (2002)
Rated R
Starring: Robin Williams, Connie Nielsen,
and Michael Vartan
Rating:

out
of

|
Have you ever really given
any thought to who develops your photos? Who sees your pictures before
you do? Who might be making copies from the
negatives before you even get your "originals"? If any one film
is an argument for getting a digital camera, it is One Hour Photo -- merely
because of the off-chance that someone like Sy Parrish, Robin Williams'
character, is actually out there looking at your pictures and trying to
insert himself into your life.
That's what he does to the
Yorkins, an upper-class suburban family who take their rolls of undeveloped
film to the local Sav-Mart photo lab.
They've been doing so for over nine years. Sy Parrish has been processing
and developing them with an almost maniacal attention to detail. Sy frequently
finds himself daydreaming about a life as one of the Yorkins. He longs
to have a place in their life since he seems to lack one of his own. That
might not be so bad if he were harmless and his thoughts were not acted
upon but Sy is slowly coming unhinged. After a series of events push him
closer to the edge, Sy decides to take steps that will make him mean more
to the Yorkins than just being "Sy, the Photo Guy."
Robin Williams has played some pretty unusual characters over the course
of his career. Sy Parrish is the most disturbing of them all because he's
so real. Sy could be the man behind the counter at your local convenience
store, drug store or gas station. He's mentally unstable and, thanks to
Williams' performance, he's frighteningly believable and he's dangerous.
Not dangerous because he's outwardly scary or possibly so, but because
he's a time bomb that can go off at any second if the right set of circumstances
occur.
The cinematography and set design play large roles in making One
Hour Photo so effective in its setup and execution. Sav-Mart is depicted as
a fluorescent lit, soulless place with overexposed lighting and aisles
of merchandise that are almost too orderly to be natural. Sy's apartment
is barren and sterile, save for a wall that features photos that Sy has
made copies of over the years. The pictures bring the only color to Sy's
life -- both literally and figuratively.
One
Hour Photo stumbles only
as it reaches its closing moments. The ending too closely resembles
the type one would see on an episode of Law & Order,
where the criminal in question reveals the reasons behind his or her actions.
Still, the thrill of One Hour Photo is Robin Williams' fantastic performance
as Sy Parrish. One can only hope that it is not forgotten at Oscar nomination
time. Trivia: Gary
Cole, who plays Sy's boss at Sav-Mart, also played Bill Lumbergh in
1999's Office Space. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |