![]() ![]() ![]() Cameron Diaz has already demonstrated in Being John Malkovich that she can play outside the conventional female-lead template, and the part of a beautiful idealistic flower-child who flirts with extremism should be ideal. ![]() And yet it ends up looking like a TV movie, or even, with its tangled and implausible pattern of character development, like a weirdly digressive daytime soap. On the face of it, it's an intriguing tale with a broad temporal and physical sweep. Phoebe meets up with Wolf, her intense British boyfriend, played by Christopher Eccleston they head off together they incubate intense feelings for Faith and each other in various pensione and Faith herself appears in a cumbersome series of heavily signposted flashbacks. ![]()
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