|
|
|
IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| BARTLEBY (director/writer/producer: Jonathan Parker; screenwriter: Catherine di Napoli, based on the novella by Herman Melville; cinematographer: Wah Ho Chan; editor: Rick LeCompte; music: Seth Asarnow/Jonathan Parker; cast: David Paymer (The Boss/Narrator), Crispin Glover (Bartleby), Glenne Headly (Vivian), Joe Piscopo (Rocky), Maury Chaykin (Ernie), Seymour Cassel (Frank Waxman), Carrie Snodgress (Book Publisher), Dick Martin (Mayor); Runtime: 82; MPAA Rating: PG-13; Outrider Pictures; 2001) |
| "The film
was weird, but not funny or meaningful."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz This is a one-joke lifeless film version of Herman Melville's enigmatic
1853 tale, Bartleby the Scrivener,
There wasn't enough material for a 10 minute movie much less one of 82. I would have preferred not to have seen this flick and should have spent the time to reread a book I barely remember reading in my youth. The film was weird, but not funny or meaningful. Jonathan Parker is the former musician, who is the first-time director, the writer along with Catherine di Napoli, and the producer. He was ensnared in a film separated from any contextual reality. It's very difficult to make such abstractions come to life, and Parker's efforts might be valiant but his results are not. The plot turns when the Boss feels he needs some extra help, so he puts a so-called honest ad in the papers and only Bartleby shows for the interview. The man is quiet to the point of almost being mute, and immediately shows signs that he's mentally impaired. Yet he's hired. He is contrasted with the so-called normal workers. The sexy and flirtatious office manager Vivian (Headly) and the two obedient but childishly playful clerical workers, the always complaining and slovenly Ernie (Chaykin) and the macho wise guy Rocky (Piscopo). When the Boss brings a date back to the office to score, he's disturbed to find Bartleby living there. Bartleby soon refuses to notarize some city records and then refuses to do any work, and the patient Boss at last fires him. But Bartleby refuses to leave the premises, so the logical Boss illogically moves the office. This results in Bartleby's new landlords evicting him and the guilty Boss tracking him down living homeless under the freeway. The Boss through his efforts to find Bartleby, gains enlightenment about the alienation in the workplace and writes a book about that experience that no one publishes. As far as I can remember, this is the only film version of a Melville novel that displeased me. I loved Claire Denis's recent film "Beau Travail," which was based on "Billy Budd"; and, I admired Léos Carax's "Pola X," based on the novel Pierre. But this satire on capitalism never registered with much wit. Also the Paymer character never worked as a reasonable one to counter the nutty Bartleby, and Paymer's silly end of film conversion came without a plausible reason to be converted. REVIEWED ON 8/18/2003 GRADE: D Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" |