Scorsese, Schrader's Ambulance Driver … Hee Haw Goes Hollywood
By Rex Reed
October 24, 1999 | 8:00 p.m
Scorsese, Schrader's
Ambulance Driver Just when we thought it was safe to return to the streets of New York at night, director Martin Scorsese and screenwriter Paul Schrader, the duo that sandblasted their way through Taxi Driver 23 years ago, are psyched and ready to scare the living crap out of us all over again. Bringing Out the Dead takes us reluctantly back to the pre-Giuliani days when Manhattan's West Side was Tombstone after dark, law and order was something in a Vincente Minnelli musical, and every night there was another gunfight at the O.K. Corral. Take a Valium. The time is the early 1990's, the setting is Hell's Kitchen, and the focus is three nights in the harrowing lives of brave, burned-out, overworked and underpaid paramedics played by Nicolas Cage, John Goodman, Ving Rhames and Tom Sizemore. All of them walk the razor-blade edge between distorted reality and total insanity, and some of them have already crossed over as they make their rounds from one horror to the next. There isn't much plot, and after Mr. Scorsese drags you from ambulances to emergency rooms with the driving ferocity of a screaming rock-and-roll beat, you may, at the end of two hours, feel the need to check into Bellevue yourself. Still, this is a furiously paced, unsparingly feverish trip to hell that cannot be easily dismissed or forgotten. It has the bloody, nerve-rattling impact of a mugging at gunpoint. Here is a landscape of junkies, pregnant hookers, burning barrels in vacant lots, teen-agers dying of AIDS, women with cockroaches stuck in their eardrums, drug overdoses, cardiac arrests, suicides and one tragedy after another, and the paramedics on the graveyard shift are the cameras through which the agony is captured. To these guys, anger, fear, despair, desperation, cruelty and sleep deprivation play like job descriptions, and no matter how bad it gets it always gets worse. Living on junk food, painkillers and gin, the hollow-eyed Mr. Cage has finally had all the stench, blood and death he can take in this hellish nocturnal nightmare. No wonder he heads for a friendly, stress-free crack den himself. While he hears voices and sees ghosts of the souls he's lost, Mr. Sizemore takes a more direct approach, pulverizing a hallucinatory junkie with a baseball bat and assaulting his own ambulance with a crowbar. But while they spiral out of control, the movie spirals out of control, too, exploding in a repellant furnace of surrealism directed with a blowtorch and punctuated by poetic narration. ("My life was less about saving lives and more about bearing witness," says Mr. Cage over the sirens. "I was a grief mop.") New York is the main character, and it's depicted as an endless corridor of human dumpsters. Well, it's fascinating, but you can't say nihilism doesn't dominate. It's been almost a quarter of a century since Taxi Driver . Mr. Scorsese and Mr. Schrader have aged and mellowed, and so has New York. So why is their New York still so graphically violent and relentlessly noxious? There are still 9 million stories in the naked city, but with all of the miracles witnessed by people who have called for emergency ambulances, it's regretful that Bringing Out the Dead couldn't find one episode about paramedics with a happy ending. Based on a lurid book by Joe Connelly, a former paramedic, it tells some truths, but it doesn't begin to tell the whole truth. Somewhere in the vomit and madness there has got to be hope. The Scorsese-Schrader team still knows how to make powerful films, and the persuasive performances and polished technology don't bore, but this is not a movie for general audiences. Even if you survive it, you will never dial 911 again. Hee Haw Goes Hollywood Crazy in Alabama marks the directorial debut of Latin lothario Antonio Banderas. O.K., so he knows what to do with a camera. He's just turned it on the wrong movie. In this curiously uneasy blend of "shucks, y'all" whimsy and social consciousness, Mrs. Banderas, better known as Melanie Griffith, plays Lucille, a 34-year-old Daisy Mae from a backwoods Dogpatch called Industry, Ala., who pours rat poison into her husband's coffee, cuts off his head with an electric carving knife, deposits her seven brats with her bewildered mother, and heads for Hollywood to become a star. Two parallel stories emerge. While Lucille grifts and grinds her way west via New Orleans and Florida, her nephew Peejoe fights racial prejudice back home in Alabama, where an evil sheriff played by Meat Loaf is terrorizing the town. In Hollywood, Aunt Lucille crashes TV with the help of an unctuous agent (Robert Wagner) and ends up on a segment of Bewitched , dragging her husband's severed head to the set in a hat box, while back in Industry, Peejoe ends up on the cover of Look magazine. The whole thing yawns its way to a finale when Aunt Lucille returns home a local celebrity to appear at her own murder trial, a preposterous scene presided over by a hilarious judge (Rod Steiger) right out of Petticoat Junction. The cast includes the excellent David Morse, Cathy Moriarty and Fannie Flagg, and rarely have so many talented people seemed so out of place. Ms. Griffith looks sluttish and awful in a series of ugly black wigs, nobody seems particularly well suited to the roles of Southern cornpones, and the dialogue consisting of such riveting exchanges as "Gosh dawg!" and "Dadgummit!" could only pass for authentic hillbilly patois to someone like Mr. Banderas, whose first language, in any case, has never been English. He's King of His World Joe the King is a grueling but haunting intelligently made little film written and directed by the 36-year-old actor Frank Whaley, who is probably best remembered as the gullible preppy whose drug deal went wrong in Pulp Fiction and as Kevin Spacey's demonic assistant in Swimming With Sharks . Between acting assignments, Mr. Whaley somehow found the time to create this remarkable portrait of an impoverished teenager spiraling toward a life of crime and found, among his friends, an all-star cast that shared his cinematic vision. The result is a very fine film indeed. I found myself genuinely moved which, in a year of silliness, is quite an accomplishment. Adolescence is never easy, but for poor 14-year-old Joe Henry (played with astounding maturity and focus by the excellent young actor Noah Fleiss), the humiliation is downright palpable. Joe lives a life so deprived and joyless he spends most of his free time in a dark crawl space under the front porch of his dilapidated house on Staten Island, listening to the violence inside its gloomy walls. Joe's father is the drunken janitor in his school-a shiftless, irresponsible wife-beater who owes everybody in the neighborhood-played without a shred of glammed-up star charisma by Val Kilmer. Joe's long-suffering, hard-working mother (the excellent Karen Young) is an abuse victim whose only joy in life is her old 33-r.p.m. Johnny Ray records, until Dad smashes them up, too. While Joe's traumatized older brother withdraws from the world to sleep on the floor inside a closet, there is a survival instinct in Joe that drives him to improve his situation, look for a silver lining and find some dignity and humanity in his hopeless life. Tragically, he must break the law to do it. Fueled by a well-intentioned but distracted guidance counselor (Ethan Hawke), the boy looks for ways to alleviate the pain, turmoil and indifference in his life, first by stealing from the freezer in the greasy spoon where he washes dishes after school, then by breaking into school lockers, and finally by robbing the cashbox to pay off his Dad's creditors and replace his mother's broken phonograph records. Denied even the most basic protections to which a child is entitled, Joe makes up his own rules in a world where he alone is king, but the only payoff is jail. Mr. Whaley is a most persuasive and compassionate storyteller whose strength is never passing moral judgments. His characters merely exist. In the title role, young Mr. Fleiss never plays to the camera like one of those self-conscious Hollywood teenagers suffering from a terminal case of the cutes. He even has bags under his eyes. The sound is sometimes muffled, the camerawork occasionally flat, but Mr. Whaley's script and focused direction provide raw materials that more than make up for the technical imperfections in a debut feature. Joe the King , with its harsh and relentless realism, will have to find its audience, but the serendipitous pleasure you'll derive from finding it on your own will be enormous.- More:
- Style |
- Frank Whaley |
- Hollywood |
- Martin Scorsese |
- On the Town |
- Paul Schrader



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