Released: 1994
Written & Directed By: Tom Noonan
Cast:
Tom Noonan: Michael
Karen Sillas: Jackie
Review by Desson Howe, The Washington Post, 9/30/94
What Happened Was..., rather like My Dinner With Andre, is an extended verbal encounter between two characters in search of a movie. When legal secretary Jackie (Karen Sillas) invites fellow employee and paralegal Michael (Tom Noonan) to her Manhattan apartment for dinner, their conversation—full of verbal twists and turns—is the sole action of the film.
As with many such wine-sipping dialogues, the chatter begins with tentative, clumsy and amusing repartee: "Is that a good book?" Karen replies when Michael speaks reverently of the Iliad. "I haven't read that." Then the evening becomes increasingly revelatory as we discover more about these people. Michael, a balding, sweet-faced science buff who can explain microwave ovens and in camera court sessions, dropped out of law school and is secretly writing a book intended to expose the capitalistic corruptions of the justice system. Karen, a sweet but assertive soul, who likes the music of Air Supply and Deep Purple, writes strange children's fiction. Other secrets emerge: She's the one who initiated this date. ("I watch you at work," she confesses.) Michael seems less interested. You wonder—with interest—where this thing is going.
The answer becomes clear when Karen reads one of her stories, a bizarre, postmodern Grimm's Fairy Tale called "What Happened
Review by James Berardinelli, http://movie-reviews.colossus.net
This is not a date movie, especially if it's a first date. Oh, it will give you an endless source of conversational topics, all right, but What Happened
The intense feeling of discomfort generated by What Happened
Based on Noonan's stage play, this two-person film is a simple character study that finds its dynamics through the interplay of a very unpleasant first date. Jackie (Karen Sillas) and Michael (Tom Noonan) know each other from the office, but on a personal level, they discover that they're both basically clueless. Jackie's image of Michael is far from reality, and Michael doesn't even recognize Jackie's attraction to him. In that sense, this is a true "blind" date.
Noonan, who has made a career out of playing the bad guy (Last Action Hero, Manhunter), goes against type with Michael, a meek-as-they-come paralegal. Karen Sillas is great as Jackie, a lonely executive assistant (or, in Michael's words, "Is that what they're calling secretaries these days?") who is made to appear slightly menacing as a result of Noonan's choice of lighting. (Is he perhaps mocking the Fatal Attraction syndrome?)
At the start, Michael's character is the most interesting. He's smart, witty, and seems to have it all together. His opposite, on the other hand, is nervous, flustered, and indecisive. During the course of the film, however, a role-reversal takes place, causing our attention to shift more and more towards Jackie as the layers of her personality are peeled back, onion-like. The psychological revelations about these two, and the manner in which they are uncovered, illustrates a willingness on Noonan's part to take his story in a refreshingly unorthodox direction.
The key sequence in the film involves Jackie opening up through a disturbing "children's story" that she reads to Michael. It's here that the audience starts to see the genuine people behind the carefully-constructed, socially acceptable masks. All sorts of unsettling things happen during this scene, and the overall tone undergoes a palpable shift from offbeat comedy to drama. Nervous or not, the laughter is over. Circumstances have become a little too poignant.
What Happened
For something billed (incorrectly) as a lightweight romantic comedy, What Happened
Review posted by "Vanilla-2" from London, Ontario, at imdb.com, 12/30/98
This movie SUCKED. I have never been so misled by the cover of a video!!! (At least it was a Blockbuster Favorite and I got a free rental of something remotely good after 90 LONG minutes of this torturous movie!) It was boring, annoying and the two actors were so psychotic that you honestly wished that they killed each other and that the cops were called in so there would be a character one could like!