Capra corn?
Frank Darabont goes populist with The Majestic
BY GARY SUSMAN
The Majestic. Directed by Frank Darabont. Written by Michael Sloane. With Jim Carrey, Martin
Landau, Laurie Holden, Allen Garfield, David Ogden Stiers, Bob Balaban, and
James Whitmore. A Warner Bros. Pictures release. At the Apple Valley, Entertainment, Flagship, Opera House, Showcase, and Tri-Boro cinemas.
Sure, Americans say they love Frank Capra, but that's because they think he's
an optimist. Few seem to appreciate how truly bleak his films are; yes, Jimmy
Stewart and Gary Cooper find redemption and vindication in the end, but only
after spending the bulk of the movie being beaten down by horrifically dark
forces. People celebrate Capra as a champion of supposed small-town values like
tolerance and compassion when what they're really feeling is nostalgia for an
imagined sense of community that may never have existed outside the movies.
Or at least didn't exist until September 11. Now we're living in our own Capra
movie, with real dark forces arrayed against ordinary folk who prove their
heroism at terrible cost, and with people spontaneously coming together to help
their neighbors. Which is why The Majestic, Hollywood's latest
misreading of Capra, may be timed to benefit from a horrible serendipity.
Surely the cheeriest movie that will ever be set during the Hollywood Red
Scare, Frank Darabont's film stars Jim Carrey as Peter Appleton, a rising
screenwriter whose ridiculously tenuous tie to a campus Communist group back in
college gets him blacklisted during the McCarthyist hysteria in 1951. He goes
on a bender, has an accident, bumps his head, and wakes up in a seaside hamlet
called Lawson, with no memory of who he is. (The town's name is a misguided
tribute, one that will be lost on most of the audience, to a real-life
blacklist victim, Hollywood Ten member John Howard Lawson.) The locals mistake
him for Luke Trimble (whose name suggests a variation on Dalton Trumbo, another
Hollywood Ten blacklisted screenwriter), the town golden boy who went missing
in action during World War II. Luke was one of many Lawson youths lost during
the war, so his apparent return rejuvenates the whole town, a revival
culminating in Peter/Luke's renovation of the Majestic, the Trimble family's
once-grand movie palace (well, it's supposed to be a palace, though it's about
the size of the Brattle).
The movie means to be a departure for Carrey; unlike even his serious roles in
The Truman Show and Man on the Moon, this one demands that he not
clown at all. He's supposed to be just the aw-shucks Stewart type who, as in
It's a Wonderful Life, saves a town full of people by himself and is
saved by them in return. Carrey pulls it off with a light touch (imagine how
much more dour the movie would have been with no-fun-anymore Tom Hanks), but
the role seems a waste of his gifts.
Director Darabont, too, is stretching; this is his first nostalgia piece that
isn't a Stephen King prison film. He still hasn't figured out how to make a
movie under two and a half hours, but in The Shawshank Redemption and
The Green Mile, every scene paid off eventually by revealing some key
aspect of plot or character. Darabont wrote those films but not this one (it's
by his high-school pal Michael Sloane, whose only other produced screenplay was
for the slasher flick Hollywood Boulevard II), and there's little
illumination of character because the Lawson residents aren't persons, just
backstories. Each is exactly what he or she appears to be, and no one has grown
or changed in the six years since the war ended. No wonder screenwriter Peter
is so easily accepted -- he doesn't have to remember anyone's life stories
because they're so easy to guess.
Darabont is trafficking here in a nostalgia -- for old movies, old movie
palaces, and that Capra-esque sense of community and moral certainty -- that he
doesn't really earn. The movie's climax, in which the memory-restored Peter
appears before the House Un-American Activities Committee and out-jingos the
witch hunters with a heroic speech that even Capra might have found a bit much,
shows the filmmakers suffering from the same wish-fulfillment fantasy (or you
could call it collective denial) as the Lawson folk, who accept Peter as Luke
primarily because they need to believe that something good survived the
catastrophe. A more relevant comparison here than to Capra might be to his
contemporary Preston Sturges's Hail the Conquering Hero, which treats a
similar act of patriotic collective denial with satirical bite.
Still, with the whole country having turned into Lawson recently, maybe we need
that kind of wish fulfillment. There's a scene where Luke's father (Martin
Landau), overcome with joy and heartbreak at his son's apparent return, pauses
to reflect and then takes down the gold star from the window of his dilapidated
theater's box office. That scene might have seemed corny four months ago; now
it will have you in tears.
Issue Date: December 21 - 27, 2001
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