Cruise and Cruz: Cold Chemistry
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On the Town
Dress for depression. The holiday movies are upon us, and from
the picture thus far, the big screen doesn't promise much ho-ho-ho. In Vanilla Sky , Tom Cruise is a man whoseface has been smashed and burned beyond recognition, then surgically sutured
into a hideously deformed death mask. In A
Beautiful Mind , Russell Crowe is a paranoid schizophrenic. In I Am Sam , Sean Penn is a retarded man
with the learning capacity of a 7-year-old. In Monster's Ball , Halle Berry is a homeless woman with an obese child
and a husband in the electric chair who unknowingly falls in love with the cop
who pulls the switch. Prepare to be dissolved in a tidal wave of tears, but do
not expect a lot of feel-good fun. Let the countdown begin.
Despite so much sad and
sobering subject matter, most of the holiday movies are challenging, serious,
artistically accomplished and worthy of attention. The single most glaring
exception is the asinine Vanilla Sky ,
a pretentious catastrophe of such monumental gibberish I predict it will reduce
even the most hard-core Tom Cruise fans to a state of stupefaction. Maybe all
that well-documented publicity about Mr. Cruise's dyslexia is true; Vanilla Sky does appear to have been
made backwards. You could mix up the reels and never know the difference. It's
so incomprehensible it almost makes the works of David Lynch look like tone
poems.
An update of Alejandro
Amenábar's 1997 Spanish film Open Your
Eyes written and directed by Cameron Crowe, this howling calamity pretends to be about casual sex in the new millennium, but it's really about
nothing more than Tom Cruise's fear of aging. He takes off his shirt a lot and
still acts with his teeth, but now that Hugh Jackman has replaced him as the
cinema's sexiest leading man, it's obvious he's heading for Viagra country. In
a plot so incoherent it defies description, Mr. Cruise plays a rich, reckless
thirtysomething man-about-town magazine publisher (a heterosexual Jann Wenner?)
with a babe-magnet bachelor pad in the Dakota, who races his convertible
through the empty streets of New York without looking at the wheel and always
finds a parking place in the middle of Times Square. His life is a column item,
with a secretary who talks like a Rolodex ("Courtney Love called to see if you
got her e-mail, and Graydon Carter called to see if dinner is still on
tonight!")- until his face is demolished in a nasty car accident when one of
his jealous girlfriends (Cameron Diaz) commits suicide and decides to take him
with her, feature by feature.
Hiding from the world in a latex Phantom of the Opera contraption that looks like one of those
facial-toning masks on infomercials, he ends up in a wacko ward with a confused
shrink (Kurt Russell, of all people, looking younger and in better shape than
Mr. Cruise) who convinces him that it's all been a bad dream. Sure enough, when
he takes off the mask, he's the old Tom Cruise again. By this time, we're all
going a bit squirrelly ourselves. Unable to distinguish fantasy from reality,
Mr. Cruise murders the girl who tries to cure his nightmares (Penélope Cruz),
thinking she is Ms. Diaz. But hold it. Turns out it's really Mr. Cruise who has
been dead all along, or at least cryogenically frozen for the last 150 years.
Immortality as home entertainment! It's the wave of the future! And get this
for romantic dialogue. "Look at us. I'm frozen and you're dead, and I love
you." "It's a problem." "I'll see you in another life-when we're both cats."
Unintentional laughs are guaranteed, but they're in all the wrong
places, and Mr. Crowe, a writer-director I used to admire, kills every one of
them by cutting to collages of Frank Sinatra album covers and film clips of
James Bond, Betty Boop and Leave It to
Beaver . None of this makes the remotest bit of sense. You find your mind
wandering, asking things like, "At these prices, can't somebody teach Penélope
Cruz to speak coherent English?" and "Is she in this mess because she's Tom's
new squeeze, or did she replace Nicole because she was in this turkey?" Which
tells you something about how awful she is, and why Hollywood gossip columnists
are already labeling her in print as "the least welcome Spanish export since
the Inquisition." Let's face it: This girl can't act, and her sexual chemistry
with her co-star is one of the film's biggest unsolved mysteries.
Too many locations, too much fast cutting and a great deal of
overacting add up to a nightmare, all right, and not just on the screen. Who
says you can't film a bad LSD trip? You can. It's called Vanilla Sky , and it's a good example of what self-destructive
cinematic havoc can be wrought by handing over millions of dollars to movie
stars to produce their own ego trips. In Vanilla
Sky , the inmates are running the asylum at last.
Dame Judi
As Dame Iris
Movies about brave, funny,
wise people suffering from terminal illnesses are familiar fodder. The point is
to show a film in which there's still dignity in death; otherwise, who would
go? If you've ever been a caregiver, you know the real untold story is in the
caregiving process, not the dying. This is what makes Iris so special. Iris Murdoch was, of course, brilliant, unique and
worth caring about, so her death from Alzheimer's in 1999 had an extra dose of
therapeutic compassion, like adrenaline. And Judi Dench-radiant, exasperating,
heartbreaking-gives the year's most luminous performance in the title role. She
is cynicism-resistant. But the most important thing that distances Richard
Eyre's wonderful film Iris from other
disease-of-the-week movies is that it's an extraordinary love story about the
relationship between the most cherished British writer of the 20th century and
her loyal, supportive and adoring husband, John Bayley-a union tested by the
years that grew strongest and met its most daunting challenge when the chips
were down.
Iris is as much about John
as it is about Iris. Based on Mr. Bayley's two acclaimed memoirs about his
wife, excerpted in The New Yorker ,
the movie is intimate, frank and shattering without being maudlin or sudsy. It
crowds a million details from a lifetime of achievement into a remarkably short time frame (it's
only 90 minutes long).
Iris Murdoch-philosopher, poet, playwright, author of 26 novels,
who was made a dame by the Queen-believed there was only one freedom of any
importance: the freedom of the mind. It's devastating to see her lose it. The
role is double-cast with the splendid Kate Winslet as the young Iris (a jolly,
outspoken broth of a girl, bohemian in her passions for nude swimming and sex
with both genders, always laughing and shocking everybody) and the magnificent
Judi Dench as the mature woman she became, failing at the top of her career
(lost in the subway, going blank in the middle of a live BBC interview,
forgetting the names of her closest friends), but playing the cards she was
dealt with courage and spunk.
It's wounding to watch the
clouding of a clear, first-rate mind, and Dame Judi doesn't just play the cruel
phases of the illness, she lives them. While a million unspoken words cross her
mind, a million feelings light her face and eyes. Fighting to keep writing and
talking, struggling to hold onto her beloved words, she reacts to her fate
first with confusion, annoyance and rage, then resignation and obedience,
finally slipping into a smiling, sweet-natured, childlike state while the house
sinks into a deplorable clutter and so does she.
Through it all, John suffers
the most. The film's most wrenching moment comes when his frustration finally
explodes. During all their years of life together, he took the back seat, sat
through her lectures, edited her manuscripts, endured her love affairs, shared
her with the public. Now he's got her all to himself at last, but it's only
scraps. Still, he takes care of her to the end. It is impossible to describe
the power and accuracy of the dimensions Jim Broadbent brings to this role. He
even looks, sounds and acts like John Bayley-balding, bespectacled, clumsy,
stuttering, plain as suet pudding, dull as soapy water, and loving Iris
unconditionally. (In an inspired casting coup, Hugh Bonneville, who plays the
younger Bayley, has the same mannerisms and looks exactly like a younger Jim
Broadbent.) All four of the leading actors lend bold brushstrokes to the canvas
of a beloved literary icon worth celebrating.
If you rush to Iris to
see Judi Dench give another of her customary command performances, you won't be
disappointed-but there is so much more. The combined artistry of the writing,
direction, camerawork and ensemble playing is what gives this movie a status of
literacy and optimism worthy of Dame Iris herself.
Altman Meets
Agatha Christie
Agatha Christie meets Upstairs,
Downstairs in Robert Altman's enthralling, sumptuously mounted Gosford Park , the most delicious
sugarplum for grown-ups of the Christmas season. An all-star dream cast
assembles for a weekend of pheasant hunting and murder at Gosford Park, one of
the stateliest country houses in England. The year is 1932 and the port is
flowing.
Downstairs, the kitchen staff warming the tureens and carving the
roasts, the butlers pouring the tea, the valets pressing the tuxedos and the
gossipy chambermaids carrying the hot water bottles include Helen Mirren,
Eileen Atkins, Alan Bates, Clive Owen, Emily Watson, Ryan Phillippe and Derek
Jacobi. Upstairs in the canopied beds you'll find Maggie Smith, Kristin Scott
Thomas, Michael Gambon, Charles Dance, James Wilby and others.
Bob Balaban is a moronic
Hollywood film producer who has arrived in England to shoot a Charlie Chan
movie, and another surprise guest is the real-life composer-singer-matinee idol
Ivor Novello, the Noël Coward of his day, played with haughty relish by Jeremy
Northam, who performs all the songs himself. They are all terrific, but Maggie
Smith steals the show, draped in fur with cucumber slices on her eyes, as a
pickled old bitch with a withering remark for everything from the spoons to the
store-bought marmalade. When the lord of the manor is rudely executed after
dinner, everyone in the house reveals a motive, hides a dark secret and becomes
a suspect.
The inept inspector is Stephen Fry, who still looks like Oscar
Wilde. It's like an elaborate game of Clue, and while you're rubbing your eyes
to make sure you're not in a Merchant-Ivory extravaganza, you'll never guess
who the killer is. Opulently designed, meticulously directed, cleverly written
and wittily acted by a cast as polished as the floors, Gosford Park is the holiday season's richest, glossiest, most
lavishly satisfying entertainment, and Robert Altman's best film in years.















