|
PETER'S PRICE
|
|||||||||||||
|
Every bit and piece of "Peter's Price" is on-key, especially regarding the performances from our two leads which really does hold up the ends of the story. Christopher Mur gives a very sublime performance becoming very convincing as the workaday yuppie whose life basically changes when he's robbed in the parking lot of his bank and discovers the man robbing him is his childhood friend. Both performances from Mur, and from the antithesis role from McCaffrey really do lend quality to this film as the two present the opposite sides of the coin. "Peter's Price" invariably examines the grass being greener. To McCaffrey's character, Peter is pretty much a success, and a tool whose life is dictated by his wallet, but to Peter, we're never sure of what he thinks of his friend whose life is reflected upon him. And you wonder which life is better, the have or the have not? The life of poverty but with autonomy and without obligation, or the life of success with total monotony and regrets? "Peter's Price" examines such questions and never really picks a side on its story. "Peter's Price" ends as a beautiful allegory on life and how we perceive it. Who is miserable one, the one stuck in this life, or the one without a future? The ending will undoubtedly leave you stunned, and Cohen pulls it off with precision.
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||
|
Have something to say about this review? Pop on over to Cinema-Lunatics
and speak your mind in our Answer Back! Forums >> |
|
[
Shop |
Link to
Us | FAQ |
Top^
] ¤ ¤ ¤ |