‘Punch-Drunk Love’ offers surprises
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In every respect, Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Punch-Drunk Love” defies
expectation.
When first introduced to Barry Egan, we watch Adam Sandler play
out his familiar routine: the awkward, funny loner. Yet something is
off with Barry -- and it’s more than his electric blue suit.
There’s a tangible desperation in his manner, a barely restrained
rage simmering just below the surface. When he tells his
brother-in-law “sometimes I don’t like myself very much,” the pain in
his voice is convincing and real. We know then that Sandler is in new
territory here.
In Barry, Anderson has created a character who protects himself by
living in a safe cocoon of familiarity and habit. Not a man prone to
taking chances, Barry is emasculated daily by seven overbearing
sisters who viciously ridicule him under the guise of affection. They
are exceedingly cruel but utterly clueless to his building
resentment. Barry is the last person you would expect to fall in
love. But he does, with Emily Watson.
“Punch-Drunk Love” bravely depicts the dual consequences of
risking the courage to step out into a crazy world. The good: Barry’s
discovery of love and companionship. The bad: The seedier underbelly
of society personified by a hilarious Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who
exploits Barry financially with a phone-sex scam.
Barry learns you can’t have the good without the bad, but maybe,
just maybe, one can give you the strength to overcome the other.
Anderson has crafted a truly original vision with this romantic
comedy. He knows the pitfalls of the genre and twists them to work to
his advantage. As a director, he has always been guilty of
pretension, but he has a disdain for cynicism in his work that
redeems him. He loves and embraces his characters.
Like earlier works such as “Hard Eight,” “Boogie Nights” and
“Magnolia,” “Punch-Drunk Love” is about constructing a surrogate
family when your own fails you. This time out, the family has been
distilled to two members: a couple.
Anderson breaks the mold with “Punch-Drunk Love’s” risky
narrative. He is one of the few true American auteurs, a word that
gets thrown around a lot but very rarely applies. He can handle an
elaborate juggling of tone and pull it off. He fashions characters
that are idiosyncratic and eccentric, but stays clear of using those
elements as a hip, sarcastic distraction designed to keep emotion at
arm’s length. Instead they deepen your involvement.
Anderson breaks a lot of rules, but does so successfully because
he bothered to learn them in the first place. He knows the strengths
and limitations of the conventional romantic comedy.
The cinematography is delightful. Even devices such as a swelling
palette of color bars inserted in key moments of the story fit well
because they capture the joy Barry has discovered inside himself. The
visuals have a confident, fluid momentum. Each image builds on the
next, cracking with energy and a fierce devotion to revealing Barry’s
transformation layer by self-protecting layer.
This is a movie that never ceases to amaze. As a writer, Anderson
knows at any given moment what the audience expects to happen and
then counters it at every turn with something refreshing and bold.
This is one of the best movies of the year.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 29, is currently working toward his master’s
degree in screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los
Angeles.
Don’t accept
‘The Ring’
The Ring is adapted from a novel by Koji Suzuki and from the 1998
screenplay of Hiroshi Takahashi’s “Ringu,” with Ehren Kruger
(“Arlington Road”) as the screenwriter for this American version.
The contrived plot focuses on a videotape that contains eerie
images. When some unfortunate views it, a mysterious call by a female
follows, informing the viewer that they will die in seven days.
Sounds to me like a really overzealous Blockbuster video employee.
What it really turns out to be is almost worse, and requires the
investigation of two of the videotape’s potential future victims.
The film stars Naomi Watts, Brian Cox, Martin Henderson, Daveigh
Chase, David Dorfman, Lindsay Frost, Amber Tamblyn and Rachael Bella.
Watts is not electrifying but adequate in the role of the intrepid
Seattle reporter who drags her estranged lover (Henderson), who is
the father of her son (Dorfman), into the mystery.
Director Gore Verbinski imbues the film with fine cinematography,
but the plot and pace are foolish.
The logic by which the pieces of the puzzle are placed together is
forced, and although certain moments in the film could be described
as chilling, in retrospect they are also trite. I applaud the choice
not to make this film into a display of gore, but the suspense is
sophomoric and dim.
At first, I was encouraged when the cliche ending turned out to be
false. But the ending that replaced it was confusing and
disappointing.
Toward the end of the film, you are beaten over the head with the
moral of the story: “Don’t neglect your kids.”
I was not satisfied with the film because the way in which it
disturbed me was based more on its uneven quality than its content.
* RAY BUFFER, 33, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
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