Patch Adams
Laughter may or may not be the best medicine, but the repeated sight of Robin
Williams wearing a red rubber enema bulb on his nose can get emetic. He's
portraying the real-life Hunter "Patch" Adams, a former psychiatric patient
turned medical student and crusader for a more humanized way of treating the
ill. Set in the early '70s, the film offers montages of a sanctimonious, not
terribly funny Adams doing shtick for kids in the cancer ward and having
run-ins with Dean Walcott (Bob Gunton), the cardboard villain who believes
doctors should be demigods and not clowns and is determined to get Patch
dismissed from the university.
Adams wins the hearts of everyone else, however -- in particular that of
fellow student Carin (Monica Potter), an uptight careerist who finally succumbs
to his slapstick charm and joins him in forming a free clinic. That and her
after-hours tryst with him prove her undoing, but this is no more than a
footnote in the overbearing onslaught of Robin Williams being funny and good.
Watching Patch Adams is like being bedridden and suffering the further
indignity of a caregiver who is self-righteous and thinks he's a comedian.
Harbour Mall, Lincoln Mall, Showcase, Starcase, Tri-Boro, Westerly, and Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Peter Keough
|