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Best Picture
| THE WINNER:
I can't even complain about the winner, I liked Driving Miss Daisy. It was a lovely film, based on the play by Alfred Uhry about the 40 year friendship that develops between a stubborn Jewish widow (Best Actress winner Jessica Tandy) and a kindly old black man that has been hired to be her driver (Morgan Freeman). The movie gives both characters their dignity by not pigeonholing them into stereotypes or shoving them into unreasonable plot developments. If I have any complaint about the film it is that the ending feels a little long and the last ten minutes or so kind of run out of gas. My choice for Best Picture did not run too long and in fact, wasn't long enough (no great film ever is), Woody Allen's Crimes and Misdemeanors is the best film he made since Manhattan a decade earlier. It brilliantly examines the weathers of the human soul, and the possibility of what one man is capable of getting away with. It features a dual story of comedy and tragedy and Allen is a genius at being able to juggle both at the same time. Martin Landau gives one of his best performances as Judah Rosenthal, an eye doctor who, as the film opens, is being honored at a banquet for his years of service. He is a great guy, his wife Miriam (Claire Bloom) loves him and so do his kids. He is a pillar of the community and seemingly can do no wrong. He has all the material things that he could ever want. He lives on four acres, drives a sports car, and has just donated a hospital wing. But we soon see that he is no saint after he intercepts a letter written to Miriam by his mistress Dolores (Angelica Huston) who threatens to tell his wife about their two year affair if he doesn't break off his marriage and commit to her. Judah is trapped. He knows that such a confession would destroy his marriage and he would lose the respect of his friends and colleagues. He knows that he has created a situation with Dolores that he can't easily put aside. The problem is that Dolores has come unglued. She is so in love with Judah that she is willing to destroy his life to be with him and he knows that he she will do it. She gets more and more desperate, calling him from a gas station during a dinner party and telling him to meet her there or she will call Miriam and confess the whole thing. Judah tries to reason with Miriam but she is too irrational to be reasoned with. He talks to his brother-in-law Ben (Sam Waterston) but it doesn't help him find a solution. Then he calls his brother Jack (Jerry Orbach), who has mob connections. Jack lets him know that he "knows some people" who handle these types of situations. The idea of having Dolores killed seems rational from a certain perspective, but the more Judah thinks about it, the more it begins to hit home. "I can't believe I'm talking about a human being," He tells Jack, "She's not just an insect to be stepped on." There is a brilliantly written scene that takes place between the first meeting with Jack and the phone call in which he is notified that the job has been done. It takes place during a rainstorm in which Judah talks with Ben about the possibility that he could be responsible for murder. Ben asks him straight out "Could you sleep nights?". "God is a luxury I can't afford," Judah says "Jack lives in the real world. You live in the kingdom of heaven." That scene is crucial to what happens later because it shows Judah making an attempt to ground himself in reality to rid himself of Dolores so he can, briefly, step out of God's line of sight. Yet Judah can't escape his conscience. After the murder he nearly comes unglued and entertains thoughts of confessing his crime. He knows from his father's teachings that he remains under the gaze of his maker and that leads him to his childhood home where he imagines a dinnertime discussion long ago in which his family intellectualizes over the consequences of a man's guilt and his free will. The dialogue here is beautifully written (especially for his aunt who thinks the Bible is a lot of nonsense) and I was caught up in the conversation and shocked when the adult Judah is able to interject a question into a conversation that is not, in fact, taking place . . . and he receives an answer! The second story is actually comedy relief, a more standard Woody Allen plot, dealing with Clifford Stern (Allen) who is a maker of documentaries of no great significance. He gets a job making a documentary about Lester (Alan Alda), a producer of successful TV sitcoms but who doesn't seem to have any other discernable talent - he is one of those guys who is always pulling out his tape recorder to make a note to himself when he gets a brilliant idea. Cliff thinks he's a pompous ass especially when he is dispensing nonsense nuggets like "If it bends, it's funny; if it breaks, it's not funny". While suffering through Lester's insufferable fortune cookie advice like "Comedy is tragedy over time", he meets a pretty production assistant named Halley (Mia Farrow). She likes him, they seem to have a lot in common and they like going to the movies together during lunch. Cliff is stuck in a marriage to Wendy (Joanna Gleason) that has long ago past its freshness. He thinks it may be time to move on and Halley is the person he wants to move on with. Halley however, who knows Cliff is married, doesn't want a relationship with him even when the attraction is obviously there. She even takes four month gig out of town to let him cool off. Four months later, they meet up again at a dinner party where he discovers that she is engaged to Lester. We've gotten the information that she didn't really like Lester any more than Cliff did, but Lester is, after all, rich and has a great career. This, of course, breaks Cliff's heart and he sits alone feeling dejected. Soon he is joined by another man with something on his mind . . . Judah Rosenthal. In a bit of brilliant writing, the eye doctor and the filmmaker sit together and the good doctor lays out his great idea for a movie about a man who gets in a situation where he lays out the entire messy episode but also informs us of what exactly has happened in the meantime. After Dolores' murder he was wracked with guilt until, one day, he woke up to the sun shining. The crime was pinned on a man who already committed murder, that he has accepted that the situation has left him completely free. Crimes and Misdemeanors breaks the soothing tide of most commercial movies. "Human happiness does not seem to be included in the design of creation" Judah says, "If you want a happy ending, you should go see a Hollywood movie." This is the movie that calls the bluff of a piece of nonsense like Fatal Attraction. This is about the weather of a man's soul, not a lot of slasher theatrics. Allen doesn't show us any details about the crime or the investigation (beyond a brief visit by a detective, which Judah handles perfectly). This is a movie about the reality, the grim reality. In the end, the guilty man goes scot-free but the innocent nice guy has his heart broken. That is reality |
THE WINNER:
I can imagine how he would view the film that way. It would be easy to resist the film on the basis that it might be a sad, cliched movie-of-the-week with all kinds of shameless scenes and an 800 number over the closing credits. Yet the movie (thanks to the screenplay by Shane Connaughton and Jim Sheridan) goes far beyond any standard TV movie. Here is the portrait of a specific, brilliant individual who was given the chance to prove his incredible artistic ability while trapped in a body that resisted his very movements. |
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