Poffy
Reeves
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As
Powerful as a Locomotive. by
Jon Dunmore © 25 Oct 2006. The
posters to Hollywoodland do nothing to alert us to the movie's startling
subject matter - Ben Affleck in grandma-sized, red panties. Set
in 1959, tracing the ripples in pop culture following the mysterious death of
t.v.'s most famous Superman, George Reeves, writer Paul Bernbaum and director
Allen Coulter (The Sopranos, Sex and the City) embark on a Rashomon-like
journey in Hollywoodland, to tease out various scenarios that might have
contributed to Reeves' untimely demise. And
Ben Affleck is George Reeves. As they say in Joisey: "Who woulda thought?!"
- Matt Damon's wife as The Man of Steel! But
Affleck makes it work. With a snake-charmer's smirk and a square-jawed irony,
his Reeves shoulder-rubs high society doggedly enough to enamor a studio head's
wife, Toni Mannix (Diane Lane), whom he believes will further his flagging acting
career, but who makes him merely her "kept man" - even whilst his star
rises as television's Superman to the point where his typecasting makes working
in other films nigh impossible ("Hey! There's Superman talking to Burt Lancaster
in From Here to Eternity"). Three
relationships (in this movie's telling at least) drive Reeves toward an inexorable
fate: that between him and his unsatisfied girlfriend, Leonore (Robin Tunney);
between him and the studio head, Eddie Mannix (Bob Hoskins in full throttle CEO-gangster
drive), whose tacit knowledge of his wife's affair with Reeves makes for a knife-edge
uneasiness on Reeves' part - especially whilst sharing a dinner table with Eddie
and his lover; and between Reeves and his own alter ego. Why
the movie is called "Hollywoodland" remains a mystery; its allusion
to the famous Hollywoodland sign which once stood atop Mt. Lee in the Hollywood
Hills (refurbished and shortened to "Hollywood" in 1949, ten years before
Reeves' death) is abstruse, and though the argument could be made that the title
is to conjure those maddeningly ephemeral glamour days that modernites seem to
remember only through rose-colored pill bottles, it seems more likely that it
was merely a bad second choice after the Superman owners refused to allow
the film-makers to use their original title, Truth, Justice and the American
Way (an infinitely more suitable nod to this movie's themes). Hollywoodland
delves deeper than the rosy nostalgia, teetering on noir (itself a glamorization
of a bygone era), presenting a more realistically rendered underbelly of the entertainment
industry than is usually reminisced when regarding the Reeves Superman
era. It makes no claims to accuracy (we see Reeves barbecuing his Superman suit,
which he did not do; we see him in a promotional video cringing in pain from his
acrobatics, which did not happen), though it does give us brief glimpses into
Reeves' well-reported attitudes regarding his "monkey suit" and conversely
how he took his role as seriously as a real superhuman crimefighter when appearing
around kids. The
film plays out the apocryphal tale of the kid who pointed a real gun at Superman
and asked to shoot him. Reeves deflates the situation by warning that the bullet
may bounce off him and hurt someone else. If I was that kid, I would have retorted,
"But you're faster than a speeding bullet - you can save them!" Almost
miscast amongst the skinny-tie-wearing private dicks and FBI reservoir dogs, Adrien
Brody's subtly humorous performance (as investigator Louis Simo) is a standout
feature of the film, as he balances his scared-hair comedic presence alongside
confused fatherly love for his son who is shattered by "Superman's"
death. (Have they isolated that mischievous gene that made every 1950s American
kid's ears stick out like that?) Simo's character is "dramatic license"
in action, as the circumstances surrounding any private investigations into Reeves'
death were never as blasé as Simo's. Performances
are so consistently good that even throwing Dash Mihok into the mix does not phase
the quality; his informant sergeant role is tackled with great maturity. Not
being a biopic, Hollywoodland does not focus on Reeves as Superman for
more than five minutes total screentime; don't take the kids if all they want
to see is a guy swishing about in a red cape and red panties with a yellow belt
- they'd more likely see that guy at the next gay mardi gras than in this film.
More an intriguing thriller, the mystery of Reeves' death is never solved (in
the film at least) and the three relationships which might have prompted his demise
are all given persuasive treatments. More
compelling than Gigli, Surviving Christmas, Daredevil and The Sum of
All Fears combined, Hollywoodland, though it is frightfully un-real,
by its very unreality illustrates how frightening the game of public persona comes
to be. As Eddie Mannix's aide chillingly reminds Simo as he delves for the truth,
"When it comes to publicity, what's true or false doesn't matter." Truth,
Justice, the American Way itself have always been subsumed by Hollywoodland.
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