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Fans
of the movies that is, people who hold pleasant
illusions about old movie palaces and the role of film in
our culture should want to see Frank Darabonts
THE MAJESTIC. The work does satisfy our cravings for mid-twentieth-century
Americana, for the good guy winning in the
end, for truth triumphing over cowardice. All of this is
fine, except that the movie in which it is contained is
overlong, predictable and much too derivative.
Peter Appleton (Jim Carrey) drives a Mercedes in 1951
Hollywood because of his success as a writer of B movies
like SAND PIRATES OF THE SAHARA. He hopes to make it to
the list of A writers soon, with his screenplay ASHES TO
ASHES. The rub is that he makes it instead onto the
blacklist compiled during Senator McCarthys witch
hunt; Appleton is one of many whose careers were
threatened. Here the premise is not fresh, though
Darabont handles well the scenes involving Appletons
car accident and ensuing amnesia, followed by his
introduction into the California coastal burg of Lawson
where Appleton keeps hearing his face is familiar.
One reason we like the now-nameless character is that he
is honest, never claiming to be the towns lost hero
Luke Trimble; it is the townspeople who insist he is.
Through his interaction with the characters peopling the
town especially with Adele Stanton, the newly
hopeful love of the dead war hero Luke Trimble we
witness the construction of endearing friendships and the
re-construction of the circa 1925 palace, replete with
neon sign, florid floral carpeting, et al. In the
background, however, lurk the specters of Peter Appletons
past, led by a Congressional committee determined to
haunt both him and the hard-won freedoms enjoyed by all
Americans.
Frank Darabont is clearly fond of casting character
actors. Give him your tried, your wrinkled, the wretched-looking
cast-offs yearning for your juicy roles. James Whitmore
as Stan the dog-owning man delivers effortless work, just
as he did in Darabonts 1994 THE SHAWSANK REDEMPTION.
David Ogden Stiers plays Doc Stanton with exemplary and
subtle emotion. Martin Landau as Harry Trimble, the
father of the all-American lost boy, comes through with
perhaps the best supporting turn. Other interesting faces
surface too, such as Frank Collison (veteran of such
films as O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU? and series like DR.
QUINN, MEDICINE WOMAN); I relished seeing Bob Balaban,
venerable Hal Holbrook, and Daniel von Bargen too. The
cast is very large, and the feeling is nostalgia for the
bigness and simplicity of the United States at mid-century.
The leads also perform well. Jim Carrey has already
proven himself a fine dramatic actor several times over
though I think those who are hailing him for a
nomination for this vehicle kid themselves. Carrey shows
often his ability to express complex emotions through
small flexings of facial muscles; he also captures what
must have been his directors demands for melodrama,
as some moments go over the top into delightful
exaggeration.
Laurie Holden as Adele Stanton provides a curious mix of
beauty and strength. She and Luke were childhood pals who
later fell in love, and she would seem to be the most
qualified to pronounce Luke as the bona fide boyfriend.
She is almost too glossy for the role, an innocent
Veronica Lake, and one could mix her up with Appletons
starlet companion who appears early in the film.
Ultimately her acting skills pull her through and we like
her genuine sweetness.
The editing work could be tighter. THE MAJESTIC takes up
two and a half hours, about 20 or 30 minutes too long.
Perhaps Darabonts storytelling adheres too closely
to the time in which they are set: the second act in the
small coastal town, the widowed father rationalizing and
creating the possibility of his sons physical
existence nine years after he left for World War II. (Cmon
no one notices telling birthmarks, the shapes of
teeth or fingernails
?) This section drags. Plus,
the menacing government guys oblige by appearing every 20
minutes or so until a huge entrance in their mountains of
Buick-made metal. Do we need so many reminders that Luke/Peter
will soon lose the idyllic comfort of his other life?
Ive seen only a couple of reviews, and THE MAJESTIC
is being compared to works by Frank Capra. Yes, I see
that: truly American story in which truth wins out in the
end. But Im sorry, a few parts are just plain old-hat,
one section even suspiciously similar in rhetorical
structure to Sullivan Ballous letter to his wife
Sarah, which was included in Ken Burns 1990
documentary THE CIVIL WAR (Mr. Sloane, screenwriter, did
you think no one would notice?)
Im not sure about the music in places it is
very catchy, though the original score by Mark Isham is
not as sweet and haunting as his work for OCTOBER SKY, a
soundtrack I went out of my way to purchase. A couple of
period pieces add nice touches.
Would I recommend THE MAJESTIC for a sure-bet holiday
watching experience? No. I am looking forward, frankly,
to a couple of handfuls of other new releases. But if you
are a fanatic for things filmic, you should take this one
in. Its no CINEMA PARADISO, but it does pack an
adequate wallop, and probably would satisfy viewers
eleven and over, as a PG rating carries only a couple of
questionable bits of material these days.

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1997-2001 Bjørn
Erik Hundland. All rights reserved.
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