
David Fincher prefaces Zodiac
with the uncommon, yet highly accurate statement, “what follows is based on
actual case files,” before dropping the audience into the middle of an engrossing,
stylish depiction of the night of the first Zodiac murder on July 4, 1969. The
next scene unfolds four weeks later when the first coded letter from the Zodiac
Killer arrives at the offices of the San Francisco Chronicle and attracts the
attention of crime reporter Paul Avery and editorial cartoonist Robert
Graysmith. A few weeks later Detective David Toschi and his partner drive to
the scene of the next murder as the mystery, terror, and spectacle of the
Zodiac case pull the Bay Area’s police departments, newspapers, and general
populace into a legendary and unprecedented state of alert. Just a year before
Robert Downey Jr.’s career skyrocketed into resurgence with Iron Man, he
injects bravado and a charismatic zeal into his portrayal of Paul Avery, but
also layers his performance with a self-destructive pathos that deepens as the
film progresses. In the role of Robert Graysmith, Jake Gyllenhaal plays upon
his boyish good looks, but also conveys a dogged sense of innocence and
curiosity in his representation of the former Boy Scout and one-time cartoonist
whose tireless obsession with this case resulted in the best-selling book on
which this film is based. Mark Ruffalo adds a slight lilt to his voice and a
disarming, gentle demeanor to his depiction of homicide detective David Toschi,
who served as the model for Steve McQueen’s character in the 1968 film Bullitt.
Through warmth, compassion, and a constant craving for animal crackers,
Ruffalo’s rendering of Toschi confounds many of the clichés of seasoned homicide
detectives that populate Hollywood movies. Brian Cox contributes a delightful
cameo as celebrity lawyer Melvin Belli and delivers one of the film’s most
surreal moments as Belli discusses his recent guest performance on Star Trek
with a local news anchor before a televised conversation with the Zodiac Killer.
As Robert Graysmith’s wife Melanie, Chloë Sevigny builds a knowing
determination and empathy into her portrait of a woman whose marriage and
family slowly fall to pieces as her husband follows the cryptic and
labyrinthine path left by the Zodiac Killer.


-
John Parsell
I love this flick, possibly my favorite Fincher film after Se7en. Having read the book by Graysmith made it even better, which is a rarity :)
ReplyDelete