FILM-FORWARD.COMReviews of Recent Independent, Foreign, & Documentary Films in Theaters and DVD/Home Video
KEANE
William Keane relives every parent's nightmare on a daily basis. Accosting pedestrians
at New York's Port Authority, he asks if they have seen his seven-year-old
daughter, producing a wrinkled news clipping of her disappearance. Ritually he roams the
bus terminal where she was last seen months earlier, playing out the abduction in his mind. Keane,
with his red hair and freckles, may first appear unassuming, but this impression is quickly belied
by Damien Lewis' high-energy, volatile performance, which should come as no surprise after he
turned the repugnant Soames Forsyte of The Forsyte Saga (PBS) into an almost
sympathetic hero. A temper tantrum, crying jag, or fit of paranoia may hit
Keane at any moment. His mind is almost entirely focused on his inner monologue, made up of
warnings or reassurances he whispers aloud to himself. Fearing he's being watched, he confronts
invisible adversaries, kicking open bathroom stalls or shouting "I see you, I see all of you" to no
one in particular.
Living in a cheap hotel off an interstate, he collects disability checks with some
money left over for a bump of coke or two. Down the hall are a strapped-for-cash
mother, Lynn (Amy Ryan), and her seven-year-old daughter, Kira (the disarming Abigail
Breslin). Lynn, a waitress hoping to reconcile with her husband, takes advantage of
Keane's generosity, asking him to watch her daughter after school. With the shy girl by
his side, he is new man - lucid and gentle. Their touching yet creepy interactions will set
the viewer on edge - it's ambiguous what Keane is up to, especially as he remains in
the bathroom as Kira showers.
The minimal edits and the camera's long, roaming, in-your-face takes of Keane may
make you think you have wandered into a film by the Dardenne brothers (The
Son and Rosetta). Like those films, Keane is a subtle morality tale,
enlivened by intense moments. Even as Keane's dialogue signals his motivations,
director/writer Lodge Kerrigan engagingly leaves plenty of gaps to fill in, as he did in his
previous Claire Dolan - only the bare facts of Keane's background are known.
With its simple and direct dialogue and off-the-cuff acting, Keane feels
completely spontaneous, its steady pace leading to a suspenseful conclusion. Kent Turner
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