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Though
it's very funny, the trailer for Comedian contains
approximately zero seconds of footage from the film.
I thought this would be an important fact to mention, as
the old bait-and-switch routine may not give you grounds to ask
the theatre manager for your money back after you realize the
film isn't at all what you'd thought it would be (read: funny). Comedian
is, instead, a documentary about two stand-up comedians trying
to turn their witty ruminations into a successful comedy
routine. The only
reason you've heard of the film is because one of those
comedians is Jerry Seinfeld.
The film was made by Christian Charles, who worked with
Seinfeld on those American Express commercials.
After
retiring all of his material in the 1998 I'm Telling You for the
Last Time tour (which you may have seen on HBO), Seinfeld finds
himself in the unusual position of starting his career over from
scratch. We see him trying out new material in dank New York comedy
clubs, and we hear people laugh at said material.
But Seinfeld has always been a mediocre comedian
(doubters should watch Curb Your Enthusiasm to see where
the real creativity of Seinfeld lay).
Audiences are laughing at him because he's Jerry Seinfeld,
not because he's particularly funny.
At one point, they laugh at him because he forgets his
own material.
Meanwhile,
Comedian also shows an up-and-coming comic named Orny
Adams, who seems poised to really make a name for himself.
The self-deprecating and extremely unlikable comedian
gets tips from Seinfeld and even lands the managerial skills of
George Shapiro, who is apparently the Vince Lombardi of stand-up
supervisors. The more his reputation grows, the angrier Adams becomes,
culminating in appearances on The Late Show and at a
prestigious Montreal comedy festival that make him look like
he's about to embark on a crime spree.
The
point of Comedian is, I think, to illustrate how
difficult it is to craft a routine into a good set (the action
in the film unfolds over a year, and it takes Seinfeld that long
to make his stuff happen).
Since most of the stand-up acts we see on television are
extremely polished, getting a peek at this aspect of the
industry is kind of interesting.
It's also entertaining to see big names like Chris Rock,
Colin Quinn and Garry Shandling rub elbows backstage while they
eat bad bar food in the dark.
But
the following things are not at all entertaining: The bad sound,
the lack of climax and, worst of all, watching Seinfeld (who is
also one of the film's producers) do everything he can to look
like a good guy. There's
the obligatory shot of him bouncing his baby on his knee, along
with the scenes where he offers advice to Adams, even though we
can all tell he probably wouldn't speak to the guy if the
cameras weren't trained on him. Are
we supposed to feel bad about him being uncomfortable going on
stage (which is his job, by the way) to earn very tiny amounts
of money as he wings his way to work on private jets and stays
in five-star hotels? Comedian
works much better as the unusual buddy film, with the older,
half-retired guy with years of experience (Seinfeld), and the
cocky loudmouth who thinks he's the greatest thing since canned
spaghetti (Adams). Trouble
is, Adams all but disappears for most of the film's second
half...to make way for more Seinfeld, of course.
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