Evans’ ‘Kid’ seems forced
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REEL CRITICS
Movie producer Robert Evans is a self-proclaimed living legend.
Handsome, stylish and successful, Evan’s lavish life and lifestyle
rivals the Hollywood stars he’s worked and played with since the
1950s. Discovered while swimming in the pool at The Beverly Hills
Hotel by Norma Shearer, Evans made the transition from actor to
studio executive producing a string of hits that included “Love
Story” and “The Godfather.” His rise to fame, however, peaked with
his arrest for drugs in the 1980s.
In “The Kid Stays In The Picture” Evans provides a self-narrated
documentary tour of his opulent life that’s stocked wall to wall with
beautiful women, sleek sports cars, a breathtaking Hollywood home and
movie stars. The home movies, news reels and photos from Evans’ life
look like a segment from “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous”
resulting in a sense of posing or re-enacting a life rather than
capturing someone in the midst of living their life. Photographs and
film footage of Evans’ personal and professional life are simply
professional publicity photos capturing the public image of Robert
Evans yet presenting it as the real Evans.
His personal and professional life never delves below the surface
of his successes and failures. Though married four times, only his
much publicized one with “Love Story’s” Ali McGraw is addressed. The
pain he professes to have felt when she left him for Steve McQueen is
delivered in such an entertaining manner that one comes to wonder how
deeply in love with or deeply hurt Evans was by McGraw. Hubris rears
its ugly head when Evans relates how he influenced, improved or made
the careers of notable actors such as Mia Farrow during the making of
“Rosemary’s Baby” or Francis Ford Coppola on “The Godfather.”
Evans is famous for spouting many famous quotes such as “There are
three sides to every story. Yours, mine and the truth.”
“The Kid Stays In The Picture” features only Evans’ side of the
story. Visually pleasing, the documentary itself incorporates new
techniques like moving scenery behind a still photo of Evans looking
out a car window. In addition, Evans’ lifestyle is stunning to look
at, but we are never taken beyond the exteriors, neither of the
buildings nor of his feelings. The tour of the house shows the rooms
empty and static, the family photos shown were all published in
magazines and the narration presents only one side, Evans’.
Heck, even the drug bust comes off rehearsed.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 39, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
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