Nothing cute about Gallo’s ‘Bunny’
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JOHN DEPKO
Extremely strange and depressing at every turn, “The Brown Bunny”
seems to target the mentally ill already on Prozac. If you are
yearning to feel completely isolated, hopeless and out of touch with
any semblance of reality, this movie is for you.
Vincent Gallo is the self-absorbed writer, producer, director and
star of this narcissistic tribute to himself. He is the only human
that matters in this painfully boring road trip across America in
search of lost love. The monotonous highways and bug-splattered
windshields have so much screen time, they seem to be major
characters in this meaningless story. Shooting most of the scenes
without music makes them even more stark and awkward in every
imaginable way.
During this tedious trip, pathetic women slowly materialize and
then quickly disappear after brief encounters without purpose or
meaning. Their insignificant lives are on display for only one
reason: to underline the importance of the psychological desperation
of the egomaniac who stars in this picture.
This controversial entry to the Cannes Film Festival has become
infamous for the very explicit sex scene at the end of Vincent’s
journey (No one under 18 admitted!). Chloe Sevigny made a risky
career choice, playing the poor lost soul who takes part in this
X-rated interlude. This scene has its own merits and one unusual
twist, but getting to that point in the movie is unbearable. You’ll
want to walk out long before the agonizing 90-minute prelude has run
its very uncomfortable course.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
All ‘Fair’ in Nair translation of novel
In “Vanity Fair,” we have gorgeous visuals but a rather lackluster
treatment of the classic William Makepeace Thackeray novel of social
satire and greedy ambition.
It was certainly ambitious of director Mira Nair and screenwriters
to try to cram so many of the characters and subplots into a film
that, at 137 minutes, still feels much too long. It would have been
better served to include more of the book’s juicy comedy of manners
rather than the Jane Austen-like, gooey romance.
Becky Sharp is quite a radical character for her day -- a
beautiful, sharp-tongued, amazingly resourceful woman with no fortune
or pedigree who is not “merely a social climber, but ... a
mountaineer.” Instead of a genuine heart, she has an uncanny knack
for manipulating people, whether to gain an aristocratic husband or a
ticket into the fringes of society. She has no qualms of conscience
about using people, even her own son, to get what she wants. This
also leads to her eventual downfall.
This film takes place some years earlier than the novel, during
the Napoleonic wars. It lends a more romantic tone to the film in
terms of impossibly lush costumes, undoubtedly influenced by Nair’s
Indian roots. Anyone who saw her “Monsoon Wedding” will once again
recognize her visual style. If nothing else, “Vanity Fair” is certain
to garner Oscar nominations for its costumes, sets and art direction.
As played by Reese Witherspoon, this is a kinder, gentler Becky
Sharp than I recall from the novel. Her edges have been softened by
the casting of a popular rising star, perhaps reluctant to play an
unsympathetic lead, and by today’s standards -- where self-serving
greed and unscrupulous conduct have come to be expected qualities.
In essence, Witherspoon plays a variation on her character in
“Legally Blonde,” only with a British accent and prettier outfits.
The surrounding cast is good, although many of the parts are
one-dimensional. Exceptions are Bob Hoskins as the ratty-haired Sir
Pitt Crawley and Eileen Atkins as his wealthy sister Matilda, who
dotes on Becky until she marries her favorite nephew. When they are
on screen, we get brief but lively glimpses of what this movie might
have been.
* SUSANNE PEREZ lives in Costa Mesa and is an executive assistant
for a financial services company.
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