Smith’s ‘Jersey Girl’ a formulaic cop out
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ALLEN MACDONALD
Writer/director Kevin Smith has always had a lot of heart. For the
last 10, years he has proven to be one of the raunchiest, clever and
fearless filmmakers out there. Films like 1994’s “Clerks” and 1997’s
“Chasing Amy” displayed a guy with a distinct voice who knew exactly
what he wanted to say and never sugarcoated it. But these films also
lacked an artistic edge. They were talky and visually uninspired, but
they were always fun and uncompromising. Smith’s biggest detractors
accused him of being juvenile and silly, and they were right, but
that was also his main charm.
With 2001’s “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back,” Smith graduated from
the teen gross-out genre he’d reinvented in favor of making more
mature, adult-themed films. In other words, he wanted to be taken
more seriously as a filmmaker.
Which brings us to “Jersey Girl,” his first effort as a grown-up.
I can say it has a lot of good intentions. I can’t say I liked it. To
be honest, it was nothing short of cringe-inducing. The story begins
with Ollie (Ben Affleck), a hot-shot entertainment publicist, trying
to balance his busy career with his new wife (Jennifer Lopez), who’s
pregnant and pressuring Ollie to spend more time at home.
Unfortunately, and this should be no surprise to anyone who’s seen
commercials or trailers for “Jersey Girl,” J. Lo dies in childbirth,
and Ollie is forced to raise the child alone. Through a series of
connected events, Ollie is forced to quit his high-paying job and
take a blue collar gig in his home town of Highlands, N.J. Seven
years pass and Ollie’s daughter Gertie (Raquel Castro) is now the
center of his life. Ollie has not only sacrificed his career, but his
love life, because he’s still in love with his wife.
This brings us to “Jersey Girl’s” first problem: it takes 40
minutes to set all this up -- and it’s 100% predictable all the way.
From here, the movie simply unravels as Smith pushes the story along
from scene to scene. Two major developments brew: First, Ollie meets
a quirky grad student, Maya (Liv Tyler), who works at the local video
store and begins having romantic feelings once again. Second, Ollie
yearns to have his old life back in the city, and soon gets the
opportunity. The question is, will he choose his simple life in
Jersey or return to his shallow, profligate life in Manhattan.
In choosing to deliberately construct a mainstream movie, Smith
has suppressed all the qualities that made him different, and as a
result, has fashioned a movie that may be safe and family-friendly,
but is also just plain boring. Uncensored, Smith humor is irreverent,
raunchy and witty, but his characters always used those traits to
cover a sweeter, romantic side. The dialogue leaped out of his
characters’ mouth like artillery -- a rapid-fire barrage of words.
“Jersey Girl” is also shamelessly sentimental. Everyone says
exactly what they mean. The emotions are inauthentic and
uncomplicated; Smith might as well have put on subtitles that said
“Cry here, please” -- it wouldn’t be any less subtle. It’s also hard
to track Ollie’s decisions. His character is never consistent. You
never get a firm grasp on who he is, because his actions and
motivations shift from scene to scene. His decisions don’t reflect
his character, they do whatever is necessary to move the sloppy plot
forward. Smith seems to genuinely believe in the material, but the
script reflects a lazy, disconnected approach to the material.
“Jersey Girl” is the movie where you’re supposed to laugh
riotously because the cute kid says the most precocious things, and
we’re supposed to laugh along, saying out loud to the person seated
next to us, “Boy, that kid’s smarter than her Dad!”
Virtuoso cinematographer Vilmos Zgimond shot “Jersey Girl,” so
most Smith fans have made an effort to recognize that this is the
best shot Smith film yet. Well, that may be, but it’s also the worst
shot Zgimond film ever. When it comes to telling a story visually,
Smith is at a loss. He relies to heavily on the dialogue to push the
story forward.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 30, recently earned a master’s in screenwriting
from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
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