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So I watched this one
on the iPhone while in a waiting room in a hospital waiting for Ms.
Hipster to get her galbladder yanked. The room and situation were
surreal, so the film was a perfect compliment to the weirdness. This
particular hospital believes in the low lighting approach to hospital
calm. Shadows pool in corners, people squint to read wall plaques
and the general mood late at night was sleepy and vaguely reminiscent
of something I couldn't quite touch upon, but had a whiff of bad news.
That said, the surgery went well. Sadly, I
can't say the same for the film. In this high (way high) concept
film, Charlie Kaufman (this time writing and directing)
creates a character in Philip Seymour Hoffman who in turn creates
a character of himself--along with everyone else in his life. But
what and which life is real, and which is part of his created world?
The lines blur to the point one gets dizzy thinking about it.
The basic plot (and this is an amazingly simplified
version) is that Hoffman, a regional theater director in Schenectady,
wins a grant for his play--a grant that apparently comes with an
endless amount of money. The problem is that his wife, a famous
painter in her own right, is completely unsupportive, disinterested
in him and ultimately goes to Europe on a tour with her miniature
paintings and decides to stay there, sending for their daughter
as well. This crushes Hoffman, but pushes him to move to Manhattan
to start his project under the grant. Turns out he wants to rent
a giant warehouse/hangar to stage the play, which seems to be a
play about honesty and real life, because, of course, there's enough
drama in life to make it a legit dramatic play. Hoffman, who is
both prophetic and pathetic, spins out his play’s narrative
to its logical sad end, along the way creating an entire city inside
his gigantic warehouse. The film takes place over many years, as
his non-script about the mundane actions of life turn out to be
not at all mundane for him, as he takes a new wife who is both actress
in his play and wife to the man who he hires to play him in the
play, fathers a new disabled daughter and somehow either inspires
or endures what seems to be the apocalyptic end of NYC (or something).
All this while his real world estranged daughter can’t be
pulled into the controlled world of the play, living her own life
in Germany with a woman Hoffman hates.
Trying to put any kind of binding on this film is next to impossible
so I’m going to give up trying. Suffice it to say that the
film becomes just a little too smart for its own good. It becomes
at times melodramatic, and other times reminds me of the Joker after
he gets his face sliced. For some reason that’s beyond my
comprehension, Hoffman’s systems start shutting down, drying
up his eye juice, salivary glands and all sorts of other grossness.
And watching the film just becomes laborious, tiring and depressing.
Despite my general hatred of giant blockbusters, at least they provide
a modicum of fun. This movie is a fuckin’ drag (pardon my
French). It was a good, original idea taken just way the hell too
far. By the end I just wanted check myself in. [DVD]
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