In the event you grew up on such movies as “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective,” “The Nutty Professor,” and “Liar Liar,” you possible know the identify Tom Shadyac. The author/director made a reputation for himself with these now beloved household comedies. You may bear in mind his first detour from such fare with the critically-panned however commercially profitable “Patch Adams,” however likelihood is you’ve got by no means heard of his follow-up.
Shadyac’s 2002 supernatural thriller “Dragonfly” was each bit as maudlin as “Patch Adams” but it surely additionally had the excellence of being a bona fide field workplace dud, making $52 million on a $60 million finances. Making an attempt one thing completely different is commonly to be counseled, however the man who directed “Ace Ventura” helming a movie a couple of widowed physician whose useless spouse contacts him via sufferers would not look like essentially the most well-advised profession transfer. Nonetheless, if you happen to’ve received Kevin Costner fronting your weird drama, you is perhaps in with an opportunity of constructing one thing half-decent.
By 2002, Costner was at an odd place career-wise, coming off the critically-panned however commercially profitable “Message in a Bottle” in 1999 and the well-received however commercially disappointing “13 Days” in 2000. However there is no doubt he was a longtime star by that time, having already received his Oscars for “Dances with Wolves” a decade prior and fronting “Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves,” “The Bodyguard,” and “Waterworld” within the interim — a few of Kevin Costner’s greatest motion pictures.
Sadly, even a star of his magnitude could not save Shadyac’s ill-advised 2002 movie, which at present stands as Costner’s lowest-rated film on Rotten Tomatoes .
Dragonfly was a vital catastrophe
In “Dragonfly,” Kevin Costner performs Joe Darrow, a physician at a Chicago hospital the place his spouse, Dr. Emily Darrow (Susanna Thompson) additionally works. After Emily dies on a visit to Venezuela to assist Amazonian natives, Joe has a collection of unusual experiences: sufferers inform him they noticed visions of Emily, lightbulbs get away of nowhere, and Joe hears his spouse’s voice coming via sufferers which might be clinically useless. All of it appears to be telling him one thing about his late spouse, so he ultimately travels to Venezuela the place he finds out the reality in a finale that’s purported to be transferring however, as TimeOut put it in a assessment, finally ends up being “predictable as it’s a very long time coming.”
That is truly one of many nicer issues critics stated about “Dragonfly,” which on the time of writing, has a 7% score on Rotten Tomatoes. Of the 125 critiques collected on the positioning, 36 come from Prime Critics, and solely a kind of critiques is constructive. Whereas Selection’s Joe Leydon discovered the movie to be a “fitfully affecting story of affection past loss of life and religion past purpose,” he was apparently the one one. In a far much less charitable assessment, the Chicago Reader‘s Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote, “The undisputed king of the cornball idea, Kevin Costner has an uncanny aptitude for gravitating towards the dopiest tasks in sight, however this time he is outdone himself.” Jonathan Foreman of the New York Put up, in the meantime, put it far more tersely, calling the film, “Sappy, mechanical tripe.”
Elsewhere, A. O. Scott of the New York Instances quipped he felt “powerfully drawn towards the sunshine — the sunshine of the exit signal,” whereas the LA Instances’ Kevin Thomas concluded that it was “unimaginable to seek out the movie something however appalling, shamelessly manipulative and contrived, and completely missing in conviction.” Past that 7% score, then, all that vital opprobrium provides as much as a 3.8 out of 10 common score and a vital consensus that reads, “Sappy, boring, and muddled, ‘Dragonfly’ is just too melancholic and cliched to generate a lot suspense.”
Kevin Costner’s second-lowest rated movie on Rotten Tomatoes
Again in 1997, Kevin Costner directed and starred in “The Postman,” a post-apocalyptic drama that noticed the actor play the titular nomad who conjures up hope in a small settler neighborhood after discovering the uniform of a postman and utilizing it to faux the US authorities has been re-established in Minneapolis. If that seems like a “Dragonfly”-level catastrophe, it nearly was.
“The Postman” was a colossal field workplace flop that just about ended Costner’s profession, and at present has a 14% score on Rotten Tomatoes, with a mean score of simply 3.2 out of 10. You may suppose would make it the actor’s lowest-rated movie ever. However so far as Rotten Tomatoes goes, “The Postman” is Costner’s second lowest-rated, with “Dragonfly” managing to edge out his self-directed blunder. That ought to let you know simply how unhealthy Tom Shadyac’s film actually is.
In the meantime Costner is coping with the field workplace failure of his ardour challenge, “Horizon: An American Saga — Chapter 1,” which fortunately at the least discovered success on VOD, and fared higher than “Dragonfly” critically, with a 51% score on Rotten Tomatoes.
