Date: Fri 26-Mar-1999
Date: Fri 26-Mar-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Playing-Williams-Sciorra
Full Text:
NOW PLAYING: A Few Words On Williams' Latest
By Trey Paul Alexander III
I had every intention of sticking to a review of the country's current,
most-rented video pick, What Dreams May Come , a winner on Oscarâ night for
Best Achievement in Visual Effects, but I must first get a few things off my
chest regarding that infamous night of March 31, the 71st Academy Awards.
(Please humor me in my ranting.)
Why must these awards shows follow the same dreadful path every year?
Foolishly, I thought this year might be different, considering that the Oscars
would be held on a Sunday for the first time in their history. Maybe, with a
potentially greater audience on Sunday as opposed to Monday, the producers
will liven up the show! Maybe, with an earlier start (8:30 pm), the ceremony
won't be allowed to drag but will instead pick up the pace! Maybe, even
without host extraordinaire Billy Crystal at the helm, the show will be full
of pleasant surprises and witty, whimsical moments! Maybe, maybe, maybe...
Maybe some day they'll get it right. but this year they missed the mark by a
long shot (with the operative word being L-O-N-G !). Instead of using the
earlier time to get things finished before dawn, the producers seemed to use
the 8:30 pm opening as carte blanche to elongate the program! The final award,
for Best Picture, wasn't given until approximately four hours after the
ceremony began! Think about it: The Super Bowl is played in less time!
And what did we get for our four hours? We were "treated" to the annual Oscar
torture of choreographer Debbie Allen's gaudy production number of sinewy
dancers prancing around inappropriately to the five Oscar-nominated dramatic
scores. (Savion Glover may be one of the most talented dancers this century
has ever seen, but could someone explain to me why he was tapping to the sober
refrains of The Thin Red Line and Saving Private Ryan ?) We were bombarded by
shoddily-produced film clip montages, many so poorly introduced we had little
idea what we were supposed to be seeing. Even the segments used to showcase
various nominees were clumsily chosen; in some cases viewers must have been
left wondering, "Why in the world did that get nominated??"
It has gotten to the point that the unpredictability of an ebullient Roberto
Benigni, the tearful meanderings of an emotional Gwyneth Paltrow, or the
gleeful, winking playfulness of Jim Carrey can't even make up for the sadly
predictable tackiness of this bloated production (ie, Val Kilmer's walk-on
with "Trigger"). Maybe next year it'll be better. Maybe next year I won't get
my hopes up...
Maybe now I'd better say a few words about What Dreams May Come , a visually
resplendent film that has little of substance to say about the afterlife, but
plenty of imaginative sequences to exhibit. Now available on videotape, this
vision from director Vincent Ward loses a bit on the small screen, but the
breathtaking nature of his vividly colorful vistas still captivates.
Unfortunately, the same cannot be said about his characters, who are left
chiefly empty when compared to the richly conceived, creative settings.
Robin Williams stars as a family man who dies and goes to Heaven, a place
conceived as a living oil painting based on a canvas created by his soulmate
wife (Annabella Sciorra), who is left behind. When she commits suicide, and
thereby must reside in Hell, What Dreams May Come becomes a metaphysical
rescue movie in which Williams and his heavenly guide (Cuba Gooding, Jr) band
together to seek out her lost soul and bring it back with them to Heaven.
Rated PG-13, What Dreams May Come is worth renting for its fantastic,
splendidly realized visual concepts (indeed, worthy of the Oscarâ the film
received), but its murky, religious potpourri theology and unengrossing, if
fairly sympathetic, characters will likely keep viewers at a distance.