Date: Fri 30-Jan-1998
Date: Fri 30-Jan-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
Playing-Nicholson-Hunt-Kinnear
Full Text:
(rev "As Good As It Gets" for Now Playing)
Now Playing--
Nicholson Is `Good' But He's Been Better
By Trey Paul Alexander III
Since Quentin Tarantino, the former video store clerk whose pores ooze the
peculiarities of pop culture, came on the scene with his distinctive brand of
storytelling, a new breed of Hollywood hipness was ushered into being. Though
not flooded with people who talk to the screen or pause in mid-action (like
Dave and Maddie of the gone and nearly forgotten, idiosyncratic television
series "Moonlighting"), it does boast a high quota of self-aware characters
who are very cognizant of the culture in which they live (ie, TV shows and
movies such as "Friends," "Buffy, the Vampire Slayer," the Scream flicks, the
aforementioned Tarantino ouvre, and others).
Though this often makes for witty banter and fun viewing, the fallout from
this "wink-wink" style is the audience's eroding ability to become completely
immersed into a movie. Instead of seeing a particular role, we focus on the
individual(s) playing the role: "Ooo, this is the one where Michael Jordan
plays Batman?" or, "Which washed-up, former star will have their career
resurrected by Tarantino this time?" Even Wag the Dog , a cunningly funny (and
becoming frighteningly more truthful by the day) political media satire, has
elements of "Oh wow, look, it's Dustin Hoffman and Robert De Niro!" in it.
As Good As It Gets , a multi-Golden Globe winner and currently playing in
Danbury, is susceptible to this self-referential syndrome. It stars Jack
Nicholson (American Film Icon), Helen Hunt ("Mad About You" TV star), and Greg
Kinnear (wise-acre TV star with burgeoning film career), and initially seems
only about the joy of casting three very different talents and playing them
off one another, rather than putting any semblance of a coherent film
together.
So when Carol (Hunt), a frustrated waitress living with her mother and caring
for an asthmatic son, confronts Melvin (Nicholson), a misanthropic writer
struggling with an obsessive-compulsive streak, with, "Do you have any control
over how creepy you allow yourself to get?," you half expect Jack to raise the
trademark eyebrows, flash a Machiavellian grin in the affirmative and reply,
"Heeere's Johnny!"
However, one of the accomplishments of As Good As It Gets , which is not quite
a comedy and not wholly romantic, is the portrayals by Nicholson, Hunt and
Kinnear (as Melvin's gay neighbor, Simon), who surmount their own individual
personalities enough to create coherent (albeit wounded and flawed),
three-dimensional characters that propel this often very odd movie. In fact,
you might at times ask yourself where this is going, but many of its fine,
smaller moments add up and create a mounting curiosity within the viewer to
find out what will happen to these characters, particularly once the plot
concocts a way to get the three together for a road trip from New York to
Baltimore.
As Good As It Gets is not flawless, and suffers from a tendency to stray with
some strange, meandering sequences, but its tenacity to follow these
characters through all their various eccentricities makes for a fairly
rewarding payoff. Patience from the audience is undoubtedly necessary during
the course of this film, particularly in the early going, as it is somewhat
difficult to ascertain who these individuals are: the commercials and trailers
are a bit deceiving in that they do not prepare you for the film's offbeat
sensibility, which gives us a protagonist, in Melvin, who at times might make
even Archie Bunker blush with his insensitive rants, and surrounds him with
characters that have their own little quirks as well.
As Good As It Gets is rated PG-13 for profanity, violence (a brutal beating
puts Simon in the hospital), and sexual suggestiveness (like Titanic , this
film finds a way to unnecessarily get the lead actress in various states of
undress before an artist who is -- big surprise! -- inspired by her form).
