Date: Fri 24-Jan-1997
Date: Fri 24-Jan-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Illustration: C
Location: A10
Quick Words:
Jingle-Schwarzenegger-Playing
Full Text:
(rev "Jingle All The Way" for Now Playing, 1/24/97)
Now Playing-
A Late-In-The-Season Holiday Lark
By Trey Paul Alexander III
The scene is Christmas time, and the concentrated voices of thousands of
children cry out in a chorus of "I want it!" that rings incessantly in the
ears of parents everywhere. You know what I'm talking about, the "it" item of
the moment; the one thing that indisputably corrals the spotlight of our
collective consciousness; the season's most sought-after toy for which moms
and dads drive themselves into a feverish frenzy with their dogged pursuit. Am
I talking about Cabbage Patch Dolls? Power Ranger action figures? Actually,
the toy in question is Turbo Man, a sleek hero based on a fad TV show for
kids, and the object of parent Howard Langston's (Arnold Schwarzenegger)
Christmas Eve quest in Jingle All the Way , playing at the Edmond Town Hall
theater this week.
The real-life Tickle Me Elmo rage of `96 adds a bit more twisted poignance to
this light, but affable comedy. Particularly amusing is an early scene in
which a cutthroat mob of salivating shoppers tries to overcome one another for
a chance at buying one of the highly hunted figures - all to the tune of
Johnny Mathis' bouncy rendition of "It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year"
roaring across the soundtrack with ironic glee. The sequence is a blast to
watch, in and of itself, but heaped upon it is the hilarious memory of the
authentic craze that descended upon the country for that fuzzy little Elmo.
We'll not soon forget the display of "gotta have it" that was revealed during
our Elmo haze in which radio DJs auctioned off the dolls and jewelry stores
offered free Elmos - with a $1,000+ purchase! Is this life imitating art or
art imitating life (or just an intriguing coincidence)?
Jingle All the Way , directed by Brian Levant ( The Flintstones and Beethoven
) , seeks to capture the lengths to which a desperate parent will go to please
a pleading child. In the case of this film, Langston, a workaholic mattress
salesman who spends too little time with his tyke, Jamie (Jake Lloyd), is not
only trying to appease his son, but is trying to make retribution for all of
Jamie's karate matches he has missed over the year. Thus, when Jamie tells him
Turbo Man is the single most important item on his wish list, and his wife,
Liz (Rita Wilson), thinking he has already procured the toy, proclaims how
glad she is that he remembered to get it, "because it would be almost
impossible to get one now," Langston is propelled into a secretive, impossible
Christmas Eve mission to purchase Turbo Man.
Langston runs into a bevy of obstacles on his journey, the greatest of which
is a persistent, slightly imbalanced postal worker named Myron (Sinbad), but
also includes a shady Santa (James Belushi), a smarmy neighbor (Phil Hartman),
and a square-jawed cop (Robert Conrad, in a clever casting coup that pits the
tough, former Eveready pitchman, who dared America to knock the battery off
his shoulder, against a cowering Arnold).
Though Jingle All the Way will satisfy Home Alone fans with its over-the-top
slapstick antics and physical comedy, the film fails to always avail itself of
the fact it's got Schwarzenegger in the starring role. Most of Arnie's
comedies have played off his muscle-bound image and used it as grist for the
humor mill, but this one, though the richer for his bigger-than-life presence,
arguably could have had any actor in the part and still come up with
comparable results.
Nevertheless, Jingle All the Way , rated PG for slapstick violence, several
innuendoes and some profanity, rates as an entertaining holiday lark. Oh, and
just one word of warning for those of you who are quick to hit the exits at
the end of a movie: There's a funny little sequence that appears at the end of
the film's credits.
