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(2004)
rt: 95m **½
Director: Niels Mueller
Starring: Sean Penn, Naomi Watts, Don Cheadle, Mykelti Williamson
Tagline: The mad story of a true man.
Take Taxi
Driver and add a heap of depression and you get The Assassination
of Richard Nixon. Travis Bickle was crazy. Samuel J. Bicke, our
protagonist in this film, is crazy, sad and pathetic. Played by Sean
Penn, he is a stammering, shuffling mess of a man. You literally want
to smother him just to put him out of his misery. He is one part Willy
Loman, one part 'D-Fens,'
and many parts that lonely mailman who decides he's going to go to
work and take everyone down with him. Sean Penn has made a career
playing shaky characters, but this is most definitely his shakiest.
He murmurs and whines and winces. He starts off sad and lonely and
slowly unravels as the film progresses, eventually having a complete
psychotic break. For whatever reason he places all of his found aggression
on Richard Nixon, who he sees as the incarnation of everything that
is wrong with the world. He hates dishonesty, which, as a salesman,
he is surrounded by. He has an over-inflated sense of righteousness
that has kept him from holding a job and made him completely bitter
and obsessive. Throughout the film we see him watching the unfolding
Watergate investigation and, though he never voices it, feels that
if the president can't be honest, then nobody can be. As most paranoid
freaks do, he thinks that he is the only good person out there. Of
course in the course of trying to show his righteousness, he steals
from his brother, lies to his employer, oh, and buys a gun to shoot
his boss and hijack a plane to kill the president. This is after his
wife serves him with divorce papers, and his last hope--a business
plan that he has submitted to the government to get a grant--has been
denied. He is the losingest loser. The weird thing is that this was
a true story. The Bickle/Bicke thing is a coincidence, I guess, but
the 1974 setting of this film (filmed in 2004) and Taxi Driver's
1976 setting feel similar. I guess that's a testament to the filmmakers'
attention to detail and commitment to the film. It really could have
been filmed back in the same time period, with its drab 70s decor,
awful clothes and grainy quality. The film is really well done, but
is so dark and sad that it's hard to enjoy anything about it. It's
like watching a heroin addict sit there slowly killing himself. You
could always Google the true Sam Bicke story, but it's just one more
example of a small man living a small life and utterly failing at
even making a blip. [DVD, MF]
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