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Paul
Thomas Anderson, the twice-Oscar-nominated writer/director of
films like Magnolia and Boogie
Nights, is back with a film inspired by '40s Technicolor
musicals which features a lead role written specifically for
Adam Sandler. Sounds
like a train wreck, don't it?
Well, Punch-Drunk Love is anything but.
While it's nowhere as demanding or profound as his
previous films, Love might still be a bit challenging if
you've been watching shit like Sweet
Home Alabama for the last two months.
It's
rare for a mainstream picture to be this brashly poetic, and
Anderson is completely unapologetic about it.
Love is less than half the length of Magnolia,
though it still has its share of long, ballsy tracking shots, a
spot-on score (courtesy of Jon Brion) and familiar San Fernando
Valley setting. Anderson devotees might miss Robert Elswit's
usually pristine cinematography (he's back this time, but
photographs everything in a very different way), the huge
ensemble cast and hip tune selection, but Anderson makes up for
it by replacing those things with brilliant color schemes and
set decorations, as well as a newfound ability to mess with
viewers' heads by manipulating the sound. Hey, there's a reason
why he won the Best Director award at Cannes this year.
Anderson's
script takes Sandler's one-dimensional character from The
Waterboy and turns him into an even unlikelier hero who
is (gasp!) fully developed - a word that previously applied to
the Sandler oeuvre as "law-abiding" does to Randy
Moss. Sandler (Mr.
Deeds) plays Barry Egan, a salesman whose wares include
novelty plungers. Barry
is a self-loather who constantly finds himself lying to get out
of the messes created by his frighteningly funny physical
outbursts. He has
serious anger management issues, often going from zero to 60 in
no time...and with very little reason.
It seems like every
time Barry pokes his head out of his Valley warehouse, something
bad and weird happens. For example, early in the film, there's a scene involving a
car flipping over right in front of him (bad), followed by a van
pulling up to the curb, tossing out a harmonium and taking off
again (weird). The
harmonium – a metaphor for Barry's life – is played by his
seven nitpicking sisters who would probably cause anyone to be a
violent agoraphobic. When
one of them insists that he date one of her co-workers, Barry
finds the dogs of love nipping at his heels.
But first, his life gets a lot more chaotic.
Part
of Love deals with Barry's discovery of a marketing
loophole that enables him to earn frequent flier miles by the
thousands even though he's never once set foot on a plane (that
particular thread is based on a true story). Another part pits
him against a shady Provo phone-sex company run by a mattress
salesman (Anderson regular Philip Seymour Hoffman) who
blackmails him into handing over hundreds of dollars.
And, of course, there's the extremely unusual romance
with the intentionally underdeveloped Lena Leonard (Emily
Watson, Hoffman's Red Dragon
costar), which comes to fruition in Hawaii with the greatest and
most memorable screen kiss in years (or at least since Amélie).
Somewhere in there, Anderson finds several opportunities
to work in "He Needs Me" – Olive Oyl's ballad from
Robert Altman's Popeye.
Like Popeye, Barry is a mild-mannered guy who becomes
incredibly violent when you push the right buttons (or mess with
his woman).
Other
than being fleshed out, Barry isn't too much different from any
other Sandler role, which makes it all the more shocking when we
realize how unbelievably sad those characters are when you strip
away the frenzied Jerry Lewis hysterics (it's like somebody
flipped the "manic" switch on Sandler's back).
This isn't his go at a Jim Carrey-like attempt to court
Oscar. We feel
Barry's rage when his sisters call him "gay boy," and
we swoon when he faces down his enemy, saying, "I have a
love in my life, and it gives me more strength than you could
ever understand" – a line nearly as cheesy as Barry's
blue suit.
But
that cheesiness is part of Love's charm. Anderson is the type of director who throws le fromage into
the mix just because he can.
Thankfully, that's not all he incorporates.
I'll probably need two or three more viewings to catch
every homage, tongue-in-cheek nod and subtle gag.
The humor here is even more unconventional than what
we've come to expect from him (check out the restaurant scene
where Anderson cuts in for the punch line of a joke we didn't
hear, or the bizarre threats made during their first sexual
encounter). And
nobody but Tarantino uses the widescreen to the same effect as
Anderson. It's
downright breathtaking to watch a director at the top of his
game the way he is.
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for
strong language including a scene of sexual dialogue |
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