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- CINEMA, Page 85Finally, a True Character Comedy
-
-
- By Richard Schickel
-
-
- THE FABULOUS BAKER BOYS
- Directed and Written by Steve Kloves
-
- In small-time show biz, fading but persistent optimism is
- always engaged in a losing struggle with slowly metastasizing
- despair. Since Jack and Frank Baker (Jeff and Beau Bridges) are
- approaching middle age and still playing duo cocktail piano in
- Seattle's lesser lounges, an air of hopelessness has begun to hang
- heavy. Stardom is no longer an option; survival, even on the bottom
- rung, is becoming a question.
-
- The Baker boys need to refurbish their tired act. But Susie
- Diamond (Michelle Pfeiffer) is not at first glance an answered
- prayer. She totters into their lives on a broken high heel, late
- for her audition and not exactly thrilled to be there in any case.
- But wonder of wonders, she can sing. And both onstage and off, she
- combines worldliness and vulnerability in a way that shakes up
- audiences as well as her new employers.
-
- Can a partnership based on the habit of failure deal with the
- potential for success she offers? That question preoccupies
- first-time director Steve Kloves' realistic-romantic, wry-funny,
- altogether delightful movie. And it is not easily solved.
-
- Banality is a security blanket for Frank. He has been playing
- the standards in a routine fashion for years, stitching the songs
- together with chipper-inane prattle as featureless as his
- musicianship. He's just a guy supporting his offscreen wife, kids
- and mortgage in a way he finds more congenial than, say, selling
- aluminum siding. Banality is a hair shirt for Jack. His life is all
- squalid improvisation and silent disgust at tinkling out "piano
- stylings." He knows better, and he might do better, as a jazzman.
-
- By transforming their act, Susie of course changes the
- brothers' lives. To deal with her, they finally have to confront
- themselves and a relationship based far more on shared genes than
- on common ideals. The wary way in which she and Jack circle in on
- a relationship is one of the truest representations of modern
- romance that the modern screen has offered. The gradual stripping
- away of false issues between the brothers (Why is Jack always late
- for gigs? Why does Frank fuss so much about his bald spot?) as they
- get down to the true ones (involving, naturally, their childhood
- and piano lessons) is done with similar subtlety. Kloves' delicacy
- as a writer is, moreover, matched by his restraint as a director.
- It would have been easy to patronize or satirize the less than
- fabulous milieu of The Fabulous Baker Boys. Instead he and his fine
- cinematographer, Michael Ballhaus, have created a gently
- dislocating noirish mood -- not quite menacing but not exactly
- comfortable either -- and let it speak for itself.
-
- It is a setting where actors can live and breathe like real
- people, and the Bridges boys are better than fabulous in it -- Jeff
- not quite falling over the line into unredeemable cynicism, Beau
- never succumbing to the pull of moral blandness. Pfeiffer, who does
- her own singing, is a cat with at least nine dimensions ever
- aflicker in her eyes.
-
- What emerges here is a Hollywood rarity these days, a true
- character comedy. Because it is a form the studios no longer trust
- commercially, Kloves lingered four years on the street of broken
- deals before getting his script onscreen. His persistence deserves
- a reward. And as a near perfect example of an endangered species,
- The Fabulous Baker Boys deserves the protection only large,
- enthusiastic audiences can provide.
-