Wish You Were Here is a slight Australian suspense flick about a married couple, expecting their third child, who go on a tourist jaunt to sunny Cambodia with the wifeās sister and the sisterās beau. After a night of hard partying the boyfriend canāt be found. The married couple return to Australia as the girlfriend stays behind to try to find her man; when she comes back, still alone, itās obvious that sheās hiding somethingāand so is her sisterās husband.
There are plenty of good things here, and in general the movie does what I wanted it to do. Secrets are revealed, foreigners turn out to be less of a problem than the stranger behind a loved oneās eyes, events spiral downward. I donāt love the way that Cambodia and its people are basically used to explore a white Australian coupleās moral lives, but thatās probably part of the price of admission to this kind of story. Two things really made the movie go beyond my expectations.
First, thereās some genuinely shocking bad behavior on display. Thereās an extended sequence involving the pregnant wife which had me really gasping and on the edge of my seat for a good twenty minutes, through several changes of scene and twists of the story. Thereās a willingness to āgo there,ā andāhereās where the movie really earned my respectāto play out all of the consequences, including penitence and forgiveness. The consequences of the charactersā actions are painful, but they donāt take the āeverything just gets worse and worse foreverā spiral path. I think that grim ānā gritty, despairing style of storytelling can often let characters (and audiences) off the hook, since if thereās no hope of positive change then thereās no pressure to change.
The second great thing about Wish You Were Here builds on the first one. There was a moment when the screen went dark and I sort of grimaced, and slumped in my seat thinking, I wish people wouldnāt always end their stories right here. This is when it starts to get interesting!
And then the story continued. And it was interesting. The characters made a choice and had to live with that choice. We didnāt follow them as long or as intensely as I would have likedāIād seriously watch a whole movie about what happens in the last five minutes of this one, just as Iād read a whole book thatās just the epilogue of Crime and Punishment. But so many movies today end with a sort of smash cut on a question: Whom do you believe? or, What would you do? In many cases it would be more challenging to the audience to show characters answering that question for themselves. It would stretch the audienceās imagination rather than confirming whatever we already believe about human nature.
So yes: The setup of WYWH isnāt new, but the payoff is much better than what we usually get from this kind of story.