FILM-FORWARD.COMReviews of Recent Independent, Foreign, & Documentary Films in Theaters and DVD/Home Video
TRANSFIXED
Although it follows the conventions of the serial-killer genre, what sets
this psychological thriller apart is Bo, the attractive transvestite who is
at the center of two police investigations. Her father is under
suspicion for child molestation. Now, the police believe the allegations Bo
made as a teenager and want her to testify against her father. But the same police officers (apparently Brussels has
a small force) are investigating the brutal murders of transvestite
prostitutes, many of them friends of Bo. Like Mona Lisa, Transfixed is set
in a sordid milieu of drugs, blackmail and police corruption. (Bo is more
Doris Day than Rita Hayworth – she doesn’t do tricks, take drugs, or work in
porn.) As the plot unravels, the film takes unbelievable turns, including a scene where Bo breaks
into a crime scene without wearing gloves and steals evidence. And later, she just
happens upon another crime scene.
But what is most ludicrous is Bo's fixation on neighbor Johnny,
a handsome gigolo she spies on with binoculars (while her lights are still on).
Johnny is instantly attracted to her, until
informed that she is a he. At their second encounter, Johnny warns Bo,
“Lay off, or you’ll get it.” He lives up to his word, setting
her up to be bashed. But Bo is determined to
convince Johnny she loves him, repeatedly intruding upon
him, even though he has given her no sign of hope. (His expression is a
perpetual snarl.) This is one abusive relationship where there is no
tenderness or reprieve from hostility. Instead, Bo is the cliché of the
self-hating victim.
This unconvincing relationship is superficially explored and not enriched by
Robinson Stéverin’s non-responsive and guarded performance. Whether Johnny is
twisting Bo's arm or shoving her down into the pavement, Stéverin’s reactions are
delayed. And it's hard to sympathize with Bo since she's unwilling to
cooperate with the police to convict her father or prevent her friends from
being mutilated. And too many establishing shots of Bo wandering the streets
slows the pace, giving the audience more than enough time to connect the dots. Kent Turner
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