‘Anger’ another Sandler success
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Jack Nicholson is generally regarded as true Hollywood royalty.
Though usually thought of as a dramatic actor, the three-time Academy
Award winner has received two of his Oscars for comedic roles (“Terms
of Endearment” and “As Good As It Gets”).
This illustrious track record places Nicholson in a category
seemingly unattainable by the likes of Adam Sandler. Although he has
enjoyed unquestionable commercial success, Sandler has been
repeatedly skewered by the critics for such lowbrow efforts as
“Little Nicky,” “Billy Madison,” “Big Daddy,” and “The Waterboy.”
After a brief foray into drama (“Punch-drunk Love”), Sandler is
back to comedy in “Anger Management.” Sandler, who also served as
executive producer, plays Dave Buznik, a “loser’s loser” whose entire
life is stalled due to his timidity and inability to express anger.
Dave is constantly abused and humiliated by his boss at a pet
products company and is too shy to even kiss his girlfriend Linda
(Marisa Tomei) in public.
Dave’s life changes forever when he is subdued on an airplane by a
flight marshal after a complete misunderstanding with a flight
attendant that could only happen in our post Sept. 11 world. Charged with assault and represented by hilariously incompetent counsel
(Kevin Nealon), Buznik is ordered to attend anger management
counseling. Enter Dr. Buddy Rydell (Nicholson), the most unorthodox
therapist ever put on film.
It’s fairly evident Nicholson has a good time playing Buddy. The
flamboyant Rydell suits Nicholson perfectly as the audience tries to
discern whether Buddy simply has unique treatment methods or is truly
nuts. Sandler reverts to the charming shy guy persona of “The Wedding
Singer” and capitalizes on his greatest asset, which is that he is
likeable.
There are several cameos of note by such personalities as Heather
Graham, Woody Harrelson, John C. Reilly, Harry Dean Stanton, Roger
Clemens and Rudy Giuliani. Some of these are more effective than
others with the non-actors being especially spotty. Everything is
tied up a bit too neatly in a “feel good” ending, but that’s not
unexpected in an Adam Sandler production.
I laughed out loud at this film, as did most of the audience at
the screening I attended. Judging by the huge box office receipts
this film is generating, the time is right for a silly screwball
comedy. I think it is no coincidence the cross-generational appeal of
36-year-old Sandler and 66-year-old Nicholson is translating into
commercial success. I hope more filmmakers aim a little beyond the
usual teenage to 20-something demographic with their future
offerings.
* VAN NOVACK, 48, is the director of institutional research at Cal
State Long Beach.
A chilling account
of Titanic
As a child, I was fascinated by the Titanic tragedy, devouring any
book I could get my hands on that shed light on the subject. The most
informative was a novel by Walter Lord (to whom “Ghosts of the Abyss
is posthu- mously dedicated) titled, “A Night to Remember,” which
gives a minute-by- minute account of the doomed ocean liner’s
harrowing final hours.
On one level the book painted a vivid picture of human tragedy, on
another, it was a real life event that had all the potent ingredients
for gripping drama: the biggest, most glorious ship ever built is
deemed unsinkable, collides with an ice berg and sinks on its maiden
voyage; families are torn apart as women and children spill into
lifeboats and the men stay behind to face icy death; the rich have
easy access to lifeboats while the lower classes are locked below to
maintain order; greed, treachery, heroism; the band plays “Nearer My
God to Thee” up until the final moments.
Somebody should make a movie out of this. Oh, wait... someone did.
James Cameron swept the 1998 Academy Awards with his depiction of the
fateful night that shot both Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet to
stardom. He even managed to make a movie longer than the two and a
half hours it took the ocean to consume the mighty Titanic. Cameron
dived down to the wreck (which was discovered by Robert Ballard in
1986) in 1996 to get actual footage to use in the final film.
However, Cameron’s fascination didn’t end there. He, like many,
myself included, was hooked on Titanic lore. In 2001 he embarked on a
expedition to make a 3-D IMAX film chronicling the adventure. “Ghosts
of the Abyss” is the result of that effort -- a fully absorbing
cinematic experience that takes advantage of the infinite
possibilities a six story screen can offer -- then lifts it to yet
another impressive level by making the images three dimensional.
Cameron is a visual master, and uses every tool at his disposal to
give his audience a visceral, stunning, moving experience. Digital
recreations of the ship’s opulent interiors are used to orient the
viewer, then dissolve to the murky image of the same space as it
exists now, 12,500 feet below the ocean’s surface. Split screens give
the viewer multiple angles to visually digest the same interior. In
another particularly effective technique, he takes actual images of
the eerie wreck and superimposes recreations of people moving about
the decks -- echoes of a haunting past that resuscitate the ghost
ship, injecting it again with life.
Did I mention the film is in 3-D? The Titanic literally leaps off
the screen. I was surprised at how much anticipation I was feeling
when the first submersible reaches Titanic -- and the bow appears
ominously from the murky depths. It is nothing short of awe
inspiring. Even photographs of the ship taken in its 1912 heyday are
cleverly rendered three dimensional -- the figures moving ever
slightly in a subtle feat of animation.
The movie wears many hats. It is an unscripted documentary crafted
by an expert storyteller. Cameron delivers all the emotional punch
and adventure you would expect from his narrative work. He knows how
to manipulate his footage for maximum entertainment value. The
expedition footage is shot like a straightforward documentary, but
Cameron’s digital recreations of real life events have been molded
with a keen eye for drama, making this project a successful fusion of
both. He’s sticking to the facts, but structuring them in the most
suspenseful way possible -- just like a screenplay would.
Although “Ghosts of the Abyss” is as close to a sequel to 1997’s
“Titanic” as Cameron can get (not a lot of loose ends at the
conclusion of that story), it is a natural companion piece. It brings
the Titanic legacy away from fiction and into the present, wisely
jettisoning any references to the fictional characters from the first
movie, sticking to the real life people and events. Cameron even
recasts real life personalities depicted in “Titanic” with look-alike
actors, underscoring his intention to stick to the facts of the
tragedy, as opposed to dramatic embellishments.
“Ghosts of the Abyss” feels more like a documentary when it
focuses on the present day research crew who have come to behold the
spectacle of “Titanic,” each with their own reasons. Bill Paxton, who
played salvager Brock Peters in the feature film (the man who wanted
to find the diamond), is meant to be the link to the original movie.
He acts as a narrator here, and often, his humor feels forced, his
emotions staged and his words pretentious and scripted. He offers us
dime-store emotions that often contradict each other.
For example, when the diving crew surfaces to learn of the Sept.
11, 2001 tragedies, Paxton exclaims, “Suddenly, Titanic didn’t seem
so important anymore,” only to follow it up moments later with, “We
decided Titanic was still important.” His words only trivialize the
shock of the expedition crew -- their faces say more than enough.
Cameron relegates his role to the background, but anytime he’s on
screen his presence is felt. He’s far too strong a personality to be
anonymous. He spends a lot of time fussing over two little
mini-submersibles named Elwood and Jake (after the “Blues Brothers,”
and designed by Cameron’s brother Mike) who have been designed to
slip deep into the cavernous hull and bring back images that would
otherwise be impossible to capture. It is here we see Molly Brown’s
brass bed, John Jacob Astor’s top hat still on the floor of his
stateroom, a pair of shoes lying together on the ocean floor, both
turned to their right side, the only remnant of a body that has long
since dissolved. The biggest moments of impact come from these little
objects, personalized when connected to real people who perished.
If I have only one regret. The movie doesn’t answer the question I
always have when a new documentary is produced on the subject: How
many survivors remain alive, if any? This seems like a no-brainer
when you consider “Ghosts of the Abyss” works so hard to pay tribute
the nearly 1,500 victims of the disaster.
An earlier IMAX film that explored the wreck, 1996’s “Titanica,”
was a relative bore compared with “Abyss,” but it did interview a
survivor, Eva Hart (she has since passed away), at length. Her
personal recollections were chilling. So, naturally, I checked the
Internet. As of six months ago, three survivors were still living out
of the nearly 800 who survived in lifeboats, each of them only an
infant at the time of the sinking and have no first-hand memory of
the experience.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 29, is working toward his master’s in
screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
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