I
didn't care for Paul Thomas Anderson's last film, Magnolia,
but its hailstorm-of-frogs finale certainly didn't remind me of
anything else I'd ever seen at the movies. Anderson's new film,
Punch-Drunk Love, starring Adam Sandler, doesn't remind me
of anything else, either -- least of all a typical Adam Sandler
movie. Unsatisfying as it often is, it's still the kind of oddity
that could only come from a real talent. Anderson is puzzling out
ideas he can't always formulate but that may pay off down the road,
in some future film. The movie he's made in the meantime has a wayward,
paradoxical texture: It seems both slapdash and maniacally controlled.
Barry Egan (Sandler) sells merchandise along with his co-workers
in a warehouse in the San Fernando Valley. He shows up every day
for the job in a Technicolor-blue suit and has seven sisters who
harangue him about his lonely-guy existence. When we first see him
at work, he's alone in the predawn when a harmonium is mysteriously
deposited with a thud near the warehouse entrance. That harmonium
is only the first of the movie's many enigmas. The people in the
movie are enigmas, too, and they stay that way. The closest Barry
gets to self-exposure comes early on when he pulls aside a brother-in-law
at a party thrown by his sisters and explains that he doesn't always
like himself and that he cries for no reason. This is the same party
where he shatters a sliding glass door in a spasm of rage.
Barry is a sad-sack raging bull, and his mood swings are presented
as something essentially unexplainable. We're not meant to analyze
Barry, any more than we are meant to analyze Lena (Emily Watson),
an acquaintance of one of his sister's, who takes a shine to Barry
and whose personality profile is even sketchier than his. Lena is
a smiley cipher whose presence in the movie is meant to fortify
Barry. What he does for her is less clear, but perhaps a clue can
be gleaned from their love talk. "I want to smash your face," he
says tenderly. "I want to scoop out your eyes and eat them," she
answers. Too bad Hannibal Lecter wasn't available; they could have
made quite a threesome. (He must have been making Red Dragon
-- bad choice.)
Before he hooks up with Lena, we see Barry sampling phone sex.
When the woman on the other end of the line tries to extort him,
it sets in motion a threadbare pursuit-and-revenge story line that
plays side-by-side with a softer scenario where Barry figures out
that by purchasing several thousand dollars' worth of pudding, he
can trade in the coupons for a million frequent-flyer miles. (Anderson
was inspired by a real incident.) Barry keeps flip-flopping for
us. He's a drone of the business world but also its manipulator.
When attacked by phone-sex-company goons, he miraculously turns
into a martial-arts machine. His love for Lena makes him strong.
Punch-Drunk Love isn't a dark comedy, exactly. There's no
smirk or satire in it. It's more like a piece of anarchic whimsy
punctuated by jet-black outbursts. Anderson and his cinematographer,
Robert Elswit, have designed the movie in harsh, contrasty tones
to match the yin-yang of its characters. The bright, deep blues
and searing, bleached whites contribute to a color scheme that often
settles into Pop Art abstraction. The sound design is equally jarring,
with long, silent passages punctuated by sudden, ear-shattering
percussiveness. In everything he does here, Anderson is trying to
summon the wrath coiled inside mildness; that's why the movie is
set in the San Fernando Valley -- it's the perfect camouflage for
abnormality, just as it was in his Boogie Nights.
Anderson wrote the movie for Sandler, and you can see why: Barry
is a megaversion of the slightly sinister, overgrown adolescent
dweebs Sandler often played in his earlier movies. But just how
important an achievement is it to deconstruct Adam Sandler? Anderson
brings out the horrific in his persona, and it's a potentially giddy
sick joke -- except that Anderson isn't really laughing. For him,
Barry may be an enigma, but he's an enigma in pain. And yet there's
an ugly punitiveness at work here. Anderson is torn between presenting
Barry as a seraphic poor soul and as someone who must pay dearly
for his perversities. The flailings and pummelings have a righteous,
puritanical fury that's out of scale with the frail framework of
this movie. Anderson has more rage than he knows what to do with.
By keeping his characters two-dimensional, almost cartoonlike, he
can offer them up as primal, emblematic, but that's not very satisfying
emotionally -- not when we are also meant to see Barry and Lena,
especially in a Hawaiian-getaway interlude, as Astaire-Rogers-style
lovebirds who truly belong to each other. The movie fritters away
because of their (unintended) lack of ardor.
Back in 1981, Herbert Ross's great Pennies From Heaven attempted
something very much like Anderson's mix of sweet and horrific and
iconic. It starred Steve Martin at a time when he was coming off
The Jerk, a movie one could easily see Adam Sandler starring
in today. The main difference between that movie and Punch-Drunk
Love is that Pennies From Heaven had a human reach and
a lyrical yearning that made even its blackest moments sing. Anderson's
provocations are tawdrier and far more schematic. His big insight:
Bland can be scary, too.
It's become cool right now for moviemakers to provide us with people
who are in a state of delicious torment and about whom we are given
virtually no emotional understanding. Barry and Lena, like the S&M
couple in Secretary, just are. But I can't help thinking
that all this fancy fa�ade-building is a cop-out, a way for the
filmmakers to avoid sinking into the mires of character. Punch-Drunk
Love is a startling achievement, but its lack of psychological
dimension prevents it from making much human contact with us. It
ends where it begins: in a state of shock. (1 hr. 50 mins.; R)
PETER RAINER
Opens October 11
Showtimes
& tickets (movietickets.com)
|