[Frederica-l] NRO: Hollywoodland
Frederica at aol.com
Frederica at aol.com
Thu Sep 7 11:48:18 EDT 2006
Here's a review of "Hollywoodland," opening tomorrow, which will be posted at
National Review.com soon. I've been pretty quiet lately, working on a new
book, which I hope to complete today. Hope yall are having a good new school year!
http://www.frederica.com/writings/hollywoodland.html
*****
Hollywoodland
What really happened the night George Reeves died?
Sounds like a pretty promising idea for a movie. George Reeves was the
All-American hunk who played Superman on TV in the 1950’s, and many a Baby Boomer’s
ideas of courage, nobility, and strength were shaped by that half-hour
afternoon show. So it was devastating news when Reeves was found dead of a shot to
the head, on a June night in 1959. His death was ruled a suicide.
Almost immediately, however, rumors started circulating that somebody did him
in. And, as in any good mystery, there were a number of reasonable suspects,
and interweaving stories of love, betrayal, and hard partying. “Hollywoodland”
takes this rich material and spins it into a classic detective tale,
beginning on the night of Reeves’ death.
The lead character is private eye Louis Simo (Adrien Brody), who is trying to
make it as a solo act (the film enjoys tough-guy dialogue; Simo had lost his
agency job because he “shot off his mouth to *Confidential* for 5000 bucks”
regarding a starlet’s heroin habit.) Simo learns that Reeves’ mother, Helen
Bessolo (a terrific performance by Lois Smith), thinks he must have been
murdered. Simo bribes his way into the morgue and pushes a stick of gum into his
mouth as he bends over the pale body. He learns that there are two bulletholes in
the bedroom floor, besides the one in the ceiling that found its target; it’s
not usual for a would-be suicide to plug the floor a couple of times, just to
warm up. Also, the bullet casing was found on the bed *under* the body—another
neat trick. And why are there bruises and wounds on Reeves’ arms? Simo asks
the morgue attendant, “So, he beat himself up before he pulled the trigger?”
Simo’s investigation leads him to the older woman with whom Reeves had a
long-time affair, Toni Mannix (an energetic Diane Lane), wife of MGM’s general
manager, Eddie Mannix (Bob Hoskins). Eddie, it seems, likes to settle any little
problems that crop up permanently, if you know what I mean. Next Simo meets
Leonore Lemmon (Robin Tunney), Reeves’ more recent girlfriend – in fact,
briefly his fiancée. When Reeves broke the engagement off, she reacted “like a
longshoreman on a bender,” according to a friend. Leonore is from New Jersey, where
patter vocabulary is different; she confuses Simo by calling him “a catfish.”
So there are plenty of potential suspects, and it can’t be discounted that
Reeves was himself despondent over his drooping career (he became so indelibly
associated with Superman that his appearances in serious films brought
laughter). He was in chronic pain following a car accident and taking pain pills, as
well as drinking too much. Even if someone else pulled the trigger, he might
have felt ready to go.
The usual label for this kind of movie is “stylish noir thriller,” and it’s
stylish all right; every detail of décor and dress is perfect, down to Reeves’
pinkie ring and his rare Alvis automobile. From the opening shot, swooping in
from far above LA to Reeves’ home like a Google Earth search, the camerawork
is thoughtful but not intrusive.
It’s noir, too, though not as relentlessly cynical as the prime examples of
the genre; seems like recent movies are reluctant to give audiences
unambiguously downer endings, such as in “Chinatown.” And it’s also hard to get the
broody-evil thing going on when much of a film takes place in the daytime in sunny
Los Angeles.
But thriller? That’s where the film lets us down. The feeling of the movie is
melancholy rather than menace. Adrien Brody has a big broken nose and
sorrowful eyes, and his Simo has to deal with a girlfriend who is stepping out on
him, an estranged wife who is remarried to the guy who plays Goofy at Disneyland,
and a 7-year-old son (Zach Mills, a marvelously natural actor) who is
devastated by Superman’s death. (“He shot himself in the head with a Luger,” little
Evan says. “That’s a *Nazi* pistol.”) The events of the movie keep flowing
by, and Simo responds to them without passion. He doesn’t seem to be
particularly invested in the case he’s working on; there’s no emotional hook. Stuff just
happens, and he responds less like a dogged investigator than like a catfish.
“Hollywoodland” has a good story to tell, but way it’s told won’t send
shivers up your spine.
********
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com
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