Showing posts with label The Jimmy Show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Jimmy Show. Show all posts

8/15/09

David Gordon Green: Has He Lost It Or What?


I don't know if I should be disappointed in David Gordon Green or what. I watched his latest film Snow Angels today, which is an adapted work from a novel by Stewart O'Nan. Green showed some great potential with his earlier films George Washington and All The Real Girls, but ever since Undertow, his films have just been stuck in muck.

The biggest problem with this film is that there are too many losers with too many problems. Again, we're given glimpses of people in a small town and they suffer one tragedy after another. The only thing realistic and good about the film is the relationship between the two teenagers, as opposed to the adults, who are just ridiculous. Yes someone will have the occasional affair, or have the occasional drinking problem, but not to this degree. On a film level, just in terms of cinema, this is not in a league with his first two, though Green does manage to sprinkle in the realistic dialogue, even though the characters are not particularly memorable or interesting people.

"Oh you're just criticizing it because it's a 'tragic tale' and you're biased against films about working class losers," is what you're thinking. Not at all. Snow Angels actually reminded me of a worse version of The Jimmy Show--in that it's not nearly as well written and not as realistic. Yes, there is power to be found in realism. The guy who plays Kate Beckinsale's husband is just a ridiculous, cliched character, and the last third of the film devolves into soap opera trash.

The only thing redeemable is the relationship between Arthur and the teenage girl, and there are some other good dialogue moments, but Snow Angels was very, very disappointing, largely in part because I thought the film was off to a good start, and then it just took the cheap, Hollywood way out. Granted, since this film is based on O'Nan's novel, it's not really Green's "fault" per se, but why choose poor material to work with? Why is Green, who clearly has screenwriting talent, wasting his time on these adapted screenplays? His best work is his own material.

How critics could rave about this and criticize his earlier work just shows how dumbed down they like it. Sorry, but drowning, alcoholism, adultery, murder and suicide shoved into one just does not work. The film spent TOO MUCH TIME on this boring shit, when it should have been focusing on Arthur and his relationship with his dad (Griffin Dunne) who, by the way, is far more interesting than Sam Rockwell's loser character.

Watching this only made me want to rewrite the damn thing from start to finish. Ugh. Bad, bad stuff. And any good is ultimately drowned out by all the bad. I certainly won't be reaching for a Stewart O'Nan book anytime soon. Another film this reminds me of is a lesser Sweet Hereafter, even though that's not a great film either. Here's the trailer:



And here's a real snow angel for you.

6/8/09

The Jimmy Show.

One of the best indy films to come around in a long while is the terrific little film The Jimmy Show, written by Frank Whaley. This is about a loser guy who wants to be a stand up comedian but has no talent. He's blown all his opportunities, made poor choices, and is pretty much an unlikeable tool. Though this is by far one of the best screenplays I've encountered as of recent.

Although Dan in his review compares it to The King of Comedy, and notes that it's not quite a great film, but close, I have to argue that the screenplay is great. It is a perfect depiction of not only working class life, but the idle life of a "dreamer" who cannot accept his realities. And there is also a great performance by Ethan Hawke in it, as his pal.

The reason this film was not well received, I have to believe, is due to it's "depressing nature," where viewers might have gone into it thinking it's a comedy. It's actually quite a sad film, and is the closest thing to a Richard Yates novel I've ever encountered. Yates is known for distilling those important scenes in books down to their essence, and many of the characters are not only "losers" but believable losers, and also understated.

Too much in Hollywood and also the publishing industry focuses on hyperbole, rather than those small moments in life that everyone witnesses. What they don't realize is that by focusing on those smaller subtleties in life, you are forced to pay closer attention not only in the art, but in real life as well. The reason Jimmy O'Brien is such a well sketched character is because you've met people like this before.

The Jimmy Show
distills these moments nicely, giving a believable and pathetic (in the best sense of true pathos) character. Visit the trailer here--and read Dan's review. Or wait to read it if you don't want spoilers. Then give the movie a shot. I can't recommend it enough.