Steven King’s no Charlie Kaufman
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JOHN DEPKO
‘Eternal Sunshine’ writer effectively twists reality
A Charlie Kaufman screenplay is Hollywood’s version of a Kurt
Vonnegut novel illustrated by Salvador Dali.
The characters inhabit surreal landscapes where ordinary reality
intertwines with dreams, memories and outright hallucinations.
Seemingly normal people jump back and forth in time and space,
merging the past and present with a mysterious future. The chief task
for the observer is to figure out which category of human
consciousness is actually on the screen at any given moment.
Kaufman presents a wild montage through the plot device of a
scientist who can erase all memories of a specific person from your
mind, resulting in the “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.”
In this latest effort, Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet are perfectly
cast as an everyday Gen-X odd couple. Carrey is shy and reserved,
while Winslet is outrageous and impulsive. Kaufman takes the many
events of their relationship and chops them up into discrete
segments. A dinner here, a phone call there, a trip on a train, an
intimate moment together, a nasty argument, etc. He then sprays all
these events onto the screen in random order, mixing past, present,
memory and fantasy with dizzying effect.
Following a lover’s spat, Carrey and Winslet both hire the good
doctor to erase all their memories of each other. It’s during the
erasing process that most of the movie unfolds.
You can’t tell a “real” sequence from a fading memory about to be
erased, until the scene begins to dissolve like a melting clock on a
Dali canvas. But through all this madness, Carrey and Winslet
maintain a genuine emotional rapport between their characters, which
makes us ponder the true meaning of life, love and relationship in
the face of an ever-changing reality.
In “Being John Malkovich” and “Adaptation,” Kaufman broke new
ground in the way a movie depicts the nature and functions of the
human mind. With humor and sly sarcasm, Kaufman presented the bizarre
and improbable as things that could be common and possible. “Eternal
Sunshine” is his third effort in this strange and wonderful vein. It
definitely evokes the surreal, but the surprise factor has been
diluted by the similar twists and turns of his previous works. Still,
his movies remain unlike anything else out there.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
Depp shines through in otherwise broken ‘Window’
Fresh off his Oscar-nominated performance in “Pirates of the
Caribbean,” Johnny Depp again gives us a colorfully eccentric
character in “Secret Window,” the latest film adapted from a Stephen
King novella.
Mort Rainey (Depp) is a famous writer stuck for a beginning to his
new book, and also wallowing in depression over his impending divorce
from wife Amy (Maria Bello). Sleeping away the day in a tattered
bathrobe in his remote cabin in the woods, he sports the craziest
hair since Jack Nicholson stuck his head through that door in “The
Shining,” which should give you a clue as to what to expect from this
movie.
A mysterious man in a grim black hat appears and proclaims that
Mort stole his story. He hands him his manuscript and announces he
has three days to disprove it. Thinking, rightly, the man is a
crackpot, the manuscript goes into the trash. Upon later reading the
first paragraph, however, Mort is shocked to find it is indeed,
word-for-word, his own exact story, “The Secret Window.” Mort claims
to have written it first, and can prove it was published in a
long-ago edition of “Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine.”
The stranger, John Shooter (John Turturro) doesn’t believe him and
begins to make good on his threats before Mort has a chance to “make
things right.” Mort’s dog is brutally killed, his house is broken
into, he and his wife are being followed and lots of things go bump
in the night.
Mort is reluctant to contact his wife to get a copy of the
magazine. He doesn’t want to hear about her relationship with her new
boyfriend (Timothy Hutton), and he certainly doesn’t seem anxious to
tell her the fate of their dog. So, he unplugs the phone and snoozes
some more on the couch, until escalating violence forces him into
taking some action.
Perhaps we’ve now become all too familiar with the Stephen King
playbook -- we’ve seen all of his plot tricks before. This movie is
as scrambled as Johnny Depp’s hair.
There’s talent in this movie -- like Depp, Turturro always excels
at playing over-the-top nut jobs. You can almost feel the spittle in
your face when he talks. But the others in the cast -- Bello, Hutton,
Charles S. Dutton, and Len Cariou -- are one-dimensional characters
in what plays like a made-for-television movie.
To sum it up, I think all of the logic must have gone out that
“Secret Window” along with the styling gel. Why didn’t Mort just go
online to get a copy of his story? Why didn’t the police get more
involved? And did they have to kill the dog?
* SUSANNE PEREZ lives in Costa Mesa and is an executive assistant
for a financial services company.
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