When At First You Practice To
Deceive- Once Again, He’s Been A Bad Boy-John Heard And Goldie Hawn’s
“Deceived” (1991)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Laura Perkins
Deceived, starring Goldie Hawn, John
Heard, 1991
I believe every woman when she gets
married, or these days becomes part of a “significant other” relationship,
wonders deep in her mind whether the man she is marrying is who he says he
is. Has not been if it came right down
to it a psycho murderer like the hubby in the film under review Deceived. (Men can make their own judgments going the
other way, but I am talking specifically about women here.) This is not
normally how I would start a film review but the subject matter in this one
strikes close to home so I felt compelled to open up with this line of inquiry. When Greg Green assigned this film to me, a
film I did not see when it was first released in 1991 and so did not know what
it was about, who or what was being deceived, and I mentioned how I wanted to
start the review he balked, although finally he let it pass through under some
kind of catharsis theory, mine. Even my long-time companion Sam Lowell balked
at my strong statement against the whole male half of the human race perversely
interested in marriage or its facsimile. But I prevailed.
The reason for my strong reaction to
the plotline of this film was that long before Sam and I got together I had
been married, mercifully for a short time, to an American pyscho type like Jack
Saunders, Frank Sullivan, Daniel Sherman or whoever he was, played by seemingly
rationale John Heard, although he didn’t have a predilection for murder if he
didn’t get his way in the world. (That was my first marriage my subsequent one
although not successful was more a matter of a parting of the ways, of two ships
passing in the night too long.) I had met a man through a close friend, who in
the end would be almost as shattered at I by the experience as I was, back in
the 1960s during the Vietnam War when many weird things were happening not all
of them fitting into the “newer world” we were seeking. We fell in love, he,
Francis, his real name, and me, at least I did, and we were married shortly
after we met and subsequently moved to Washington, D.C where he claimed he had
a job offer from a high ranking governmental official. (I won’t give specific details and names since
this is not about them and they were totally unaware of what was happening.).
This after Francis allegedly had been honorably discharged from the military
through these connections since he had otherwise been scheduled in that hated
year 1969 to go to Vietnam as an infantryman (as I would later learn through Vietnam
veteran Sam really “cannon-fodder).
We went to Washington where I had
assumed he was working for that governmental agency and while times were tough
as they can be for newly marrieds I thought things were going okay. Then we had
a burglary in our small apartment and almost all our items of value were
“stolen.” We filed a police report but nothing ever came of it, burglary then,
maybe now too, a fact of life in big cities and small, mostly unsolved. Then a
few weeks later the other shoe dropped when I got a call from a collection
agency in Silver Springs up on the border in Maryland telling me that Francis
had forged a company check while he was working for them and that they were
going to prosecute if they were not made whole in the matter (their
legally-based expression). Which we did pay back after Francis came home and
told me that the government job had fallen through and he was afraid to tell
me. Had gotten the collection agency job on the fly in order to have money
coming since we were just scraping by since I was only working in a department
store at the time. Having no particular reason to be in Washington where
neither of us had roots we headed back to Albany and stayed with my parents for
a while.
That was when the final straw broke.
During all those several months down in D.C. Francis’ mother was getting calls
from the FBI looking for Francis who they claimed was AWOL (as part of his lies
he had told me that he had to go to Fort Dix to be discharged after his
connections pulled their “strings”). Francis said nothing to me about it until
one day his mother called up and told him that she had given them our address
so he could straighten things out with them. That is when he told me that he
indeed was AWOL, had been all along since he did not want to go to Vietnam (and
weirdly had worried that he would die if he went over there and had never been
married). Francis in a moment of candor also told me that he had staged the
Washington burglary to get money for us to live on since he was broke and the
collection agency job didn’t pay much. He also admitted to many other lies
about his life and achievements. On the advice, solid advice, of my pious
parents I filed quickly for divorce on mental cruelty grounds and started a
long and expensive process to have the marriage annulled by the Catholic Church
so I could marry again without flak from the Church (in those days I was a serious
practicing Catholic). After the FBI came to my family’s house and took Francis
away I never saw him again although he called several times trying to get back
together. Jesus. I would go a number of years without male companionship due to
that horrible series of deceptions so don’t tell me I don’t know about such men.
That I am being crazy for stating that every woman also harbors such deep
concerns when she starts a serious relationship.
As dear sweet Sam says in his
reviews here’s the story-line. Young artsy Adrianne, played by Goldie Hawn, meets
and marries Jack Saunders in New York City (as already telegraphed he had other
aliases but let’s stick with this name), an art curator played by John Heard
and they have a child. They go along for several years until the wheels begin to
fall off for reasons never made clear except greed and avarice on Jack’s part
when forgeries and missing items start happening in his department with him as a
prime suspect after a curator had been murdered for no known reason. To get out
from under he tells Adrianne he needs to go to Boston for an auction. That is a
turning point since a fellow worker of Adrianne’s on hearing from her that Jack
was in Boston mentioned that she thought she had seen him entering a hotel bar.
He talks his way out of that even when Adrianne finds out things that place him
in the city during that period. Shortly after this Jack “dies” in a car accident.
That is a tripping point for when
Adrianne goes to try to collect on Jack’s Social Security contribution she is shocked
to find he was not really Jack Saunders who had died a number of years before
but his closest friend Frank Sullivan. Then Adrianne becomes a snoop, a detective
tracking down the real deal including finding Frank’s mother who tells her that
Frank was a bad son (an understatement under the circumstances). Presto Jack/Frank
pops up at his mother’s New York apartment after luring Adrianne there.
Tells her some cock and bull story about being blackmailed by a guy named Daniel
Sherman and he needed to “die” to get out from under but this Sherman was
looking for a very valuable ancient necklace to make things go away.
This is all bullshit since Jack/Frank
is also Daniel with another family out in the suburbs to boot. He wants that
damn necklace for whatever reason and he will kill if he has to even though allegedly
he doesn’t want to hurt Adrianne or their daughter. Given his murderous track
record, the curator, the hitchhiker who took his place in that car accident,
his mother, and who knows maybe even beloved Jack Saunders Frank is a sure bet
to kill Adrianne for that freaking amulet. And he almost does except by an interesting
and inevitable sleight of hand Adrianne does him in by her own deception. This
film has too many moving and unresolved moving parts to be a highly recommended
thriller but is first-rate evidence for my contention that every woman worries about
what kind of hell she might be getting into when she goes down the aisle. Remember
my story if not this one.
No comments:
Post a Comment