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The Double Hour: movie review

In the psychological thriller 'The Double Hour,' an ex-cop and chambermaid meet at a dating club and hit it off, only to have tragedy strike.

April 15, 2011

The Double Hour鈥 is the first feature from director Giuseppe Capotondi, a former philosophy student who looks as if he鈥檚 still at it. Actually, pseudo-philosophy is more like it. He鈥檚 made a psychological thriller that is very heavy on the mumbo-jumbo.

Sonia (the talented Ksenia Rappoport), a Slovenian immigrant working as a chambermaid in a fancy hotel in Turin, Italy, hooks up with the hale ex-cop Guido (Filippo Timi, who was marvelous as Mussolini in 鈥Vincere鈥) at a dating club. Things are looking good when suddenly tragedy, as they say, strikes 鈥 but whose tragedy is it, in what world, and why?

Capotondi keeps circling his movie in and out of dream states and waking states as the whodunit morphs into who-cares-who-dunit? It鈥檚 reassuring, I suppose, to know that Hollywood isn鈥檛 the only place these days that鈥檚 turning out multiple-mind fantasias (鈥The Adjustment Bureau,鈥 鈥Source Code,鈥 et al.). But I鈥檓 starting to feel an intense nostalgia for linear storytelling. Grade: B- (Not rated.)