It’s all ‘About Schmidt;’ ‘Chicago’ razzle-dazzles
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Nicholson subtle, yet powerful in ‘Schmidt’
When I walked into the local Cineplex over the weekend, I brought
with me a dose of skepticism about the film that I was about to
watch. After all, how could a movie about a retired insurance actuary
making a cross-country tour in his Winnebago be the stuff of Golden
Globe nominations and Oscar buzz?
But only a short while into “About Schmidt,” I was a believer.
Jack Nicholson and Kathy Bates have done it again.
Nicholson, who plays Warren Schmidt, delivers a subtle, yet
powerful performance as a man who looks back at a lifetime of playing
it safe and realizes that he has never done anything of any value.
Schmidt decides that he must take up a cause and eventually sets
out in his 35-foot Winnebago Adventurer to save his only daughter,
Jeannie (Hope Davis), from marrying a mullet-haired waterbed salesman
and pyramid scheme promoter named Randall (Dermot Mulroney).
Along the way, Schmidt writes letters to a 6-year-old Tanzanian
orphan named Ndugu, whom he “adopted” for $22 a month after seeing an
ad on television.
Schmidt doesn’t pull any punches as he fills little Ndugu in on
his thoughts about the young punk who took his position at the
insurance company, the life he can’t stand anymore and the good for
nothing “nincompoop” that his daughter is about to marry. The tragic
comedy of Schmidt’s life is presented to the audience and Ndugu
throughout the film in these letters.
After several hilarious misadventures in the RV parks, small towns
and kooky tourist attractions across America’s heartland, Schmidt
finds his way to the home of Roberta, the mother of the groom-to-be
played by Kathy Bates. Bates, who has made a career out of playing
quirky characters, outdoes herself in this role. She even goes as far
as a nude scene in which her character tries to seduce a horrified
Schmidt in her Jacuzzi.
I won’t tell you how the wedding turns out for the same reason
that I have purposely left out the comic twists encountered
throughout the film.
“About Schmidt” is a film filled with rich characters who cannot
be done justice and great dark humor that would only be spoiled by
such a cursory review. Go see “About Schmidt” for yourself and see
what all the buzz is about.
* RYAN GILMORE is a Costa Mesa resident and movie fan.
Gere shines in the offstage ‘Chicago’
Stage director/choreographer Rob Marshall’s adaptation of Bob
Fosse’s critically acclaimed 1975 Broadway musical, “Chicago,” is
part Hollywood, part Broadway, but all show business and then some.
The film’s glitz and glamour entice you to enter a world of sex,
showmanship and deceit. The film’s satirical view on celebrity, along
with Bill Condon’s fast-paced, edit-filled screenplay and Marshall’s
choreography and creative casting, makes it easy to stay for a while.
Accused of murdering her lover, wannabe cabaret singer Roxie Hart
(Renee Zellweger) is incarcerated on Murderess Row in Cook County
Jail. Other “he-had-it-coming” cellmates, including her idol, the
vaudevillian star Velma Kelly (Catherine Zeta-Jones), surround her.
Roxie and Velma become rivals, jockeying for the attention of the
press and the silver-tongued, sleazy, but charming Billy Flynn
(Richard Gere), who constantly brags he’s never lost a case for his
female clients.
Once vulnerable and impressionable, Roxie quickly learns that to
win her case, she must first win over the press and woo public
sentiment. It’s not difficult with Flynn’s exploitation, as stylishly
revealed in the show-stealing press conference number in which the
reporters, supported by puppet strings, question Roxie as Flynn’s
ventriloquist’s dummy.
Although everyone in the movie is corrupt, we still like them.
Above all, the audience needs to root for Roxie’s release even if
she’s guilty as sin. Zellweger’s portrayal is magical. She transforms
Roxie from a bewildered, naive victim into a shrewd
do-whatever-it-takes con artist.
We view the scintillating theatrical world through Roxie’s eyes,
as the film cuts back and forth in the middle of musical numbers to
events unfolding off-stage in the dreary reality of 1920s Chicago.
With conventional stage blocking and choreography, the musical
numbers are filmed in a style reminiscent of earlier Hollywood
musicals, allowing the audience to experience live theater.
In view of Marshall’s theatrical background, one might expect him
to cast actors well known for their theatrical work. There are no
stand-ins; each actor performs his or her own song and dance routine.
Even though Zellweger and Zeta-Jones give brilliant performances,
it’s Gere’s campy musical numbers that stand out. Encircled by
burlesque women, he sarcastically croons, “All I Care About is Love,”
while, off stage, he’s being fitted for an expensive hand-tailored
suit. He convinces his clients that the way to get away with murder
is to “Razzle Dazzle” the jury. Gere not only performs an impressive
tap dance both on stage and in the courtroom, but he even gives us a
finale with a surprising plot twist.
Supporting characters also vie for the spotlight: Queen Latifah,
as the prison warden, belts out “When You’re Good to Momma.” John C.
Reilly, as Roxie’s meek and stupefied husband, wails “Mr.
Cellophane.”
I haven’t seen “Chicago” on Broadway or even in Los Angeles when
the touring company visited the left coast. So, with no knowledge of
the characters or plot, what is my judgment of this stage-to-screen
interpretation of “Chicago?” I was razzle-dazzled, of course.
If you can’t make it to Broadway this weekend, head to “Chicago”
-- the next best thing.
* JULIE LOWRANCE, 40, is a Costa Mesa resident who works at a
Newport Beach overnight aircraft advertising agency.
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