Starring Chris Cooper, Patricia Clarkson
Directed by Ira Sachs
“I always thought marriage was a type of illness, like chicken pox,”
says Richard. His narration establishes what could be a macabre comedy,
yet may be a portent of dramatic misfortune, and in truth is a little
of both.
Sachs reaches through a socially turbulent 1940s to poke around the
floral prints and beige flannel of domestic propriety: it’s a little
Douglas Sirk, a little Todd Haynes, though far less successful than
either. Tone is the sticking point as the writer/director presents
Harry and Pat Allen, an outwardly contented couple. Pat loves Harry,
but Harry loves the much younger Kay. Rather than see his wife suffer,
he decides to kill her. Then family friend Richard intervenes when he
makes a move for Kay, while Pat is making moves of her own. At the core
of this duplicitous business lies gallows humour that doesn’t save what
should be an enjoyably buttoned-down story about lies, adultery and
murder. Instead it falters on a line between black comedy and romantic
melodrama.
This variability makes the plight of Sachs’ characters like
something overheard on a train, curious yet largely devoid of personal
involvement. Despite solid performances and appealing design, Married Life prefers to shuffle the deck than play its hand.