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- <text id=94TT0115>
- <title>
- Jan. 31, 1994: The Arts & Media:Show Business
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 31, 1994 California:State of Shock
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 102
- Show Business
- Still Lucky Jim?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Comedy czar James L. Brooks tries to fix the movie that used
- to be a musical
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--With reporting by Elizabeth L. Bland and William Tynan/ New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Jim Brooks doesn't want to let go of people. Especially the
- people he creates. As TV's most admired comedy writer-producer-impresario,
- he has lived intimately with such enduring characters as Mary
- Tyler Moore's Mary Richards, the Taxi drivers and all the Simpsons.
- For years on end, he has stage-managed the human crises, triumphs,
- compromises that keep the best sitcoms fresh and true.
- </p>
- <p> As a feature-film maker, Brooks is just as determined to hold
- on to his people. Terms of Endearment--his first film as writer-director,
- which in 1984 earned him three Oscars, including one for Best
- Picture--begins with the birth of the Debra Winger character
- and ends after her death. Broadcast News, his delicately furious
- 1987 comedy about network infotainment, opens when the star
- newsfolk are kids and ends seven years after the climax. His
- ultimate film would be the life story of everyone on this planet--painful emotional reality, but with great jokes. As a writer
- and a guy, he can imagine nothing worse than abandonment. "Until
- recently," he observes, "just saying that word made my legs
- shake. And even now they're not so steady."
- </p>
- <p> That he can stand without crutches today is a minor miracle
- because, at 53, James L. Brooks has endured his harshest professional
- challenge. Last August, after three years of work, he had the
- first test screening of I'll Do Anything, his Hollywood father-daughter
- story with musical numbers written by Prince, Carole King and
- Sinead O'Connor and with choreography by Twyla Tharp. It's tough
- enough under the best of circumstances for the fretful filmmaker
- to let go of his babies and present them to audiences. But this
- time Brooks saw his anxiety justified. Audience response was
- calamitous: 100 people walked out, and opinion cards showed
- they hated the songs.
- </p>
- <p> So Brooks took his movie project back to the editing-room body
- shop in hopes of saving the chassis, while Hollywood and the
- press looked on like rubberneckers at a freeway crash. Release
- of I'll Do Anything, planned as Columbia Pictures' big Christmas
- movie, was delayed two months to allow for reshooting. When
- the film opens next week, only a fragment of one song will remain.
- </p>
- <p> Virtually every movie is reshaped during editing, but has any
- musical ever had its songs removed after the picture was shot?
- The surgery threatened to upset the delicate texture of the
- story, the balance of personalities, that Brooks always seeks.
- "The ripple effect drove me crazy," he says. "You spit in the
- water and cause a tidal wave." And few films have been so avidly,
- publicly scrutinized while its director was trying to fix things.
- "It's antithetical to everything you need to do your job," Brooks
- says. "There's a time when you gotta close the door."
- </p>
- <p> Close it and hope people don't remember I'll Do Anything as
- the last action musical. "Jim was trying something very interesting,"
- says actor-writer-director Albert Brooks (no kin), who plays
- a Hollywood mogul in the film. "But that doesn't mean that if
- it didn't work, the project doesn't work. After all, every single
- thing in our lives was something else before we got to it. Would
- you like to stand in a restaurant and watch them cook your meal?
- If you saw the Mona Lisa three weeks into it..." He pauses.
- "Actually, the Mona Lisa didn't look that great when it was
- completed."
- </p>
- <p> All right then, let's take Albert Brooks at his word and not
- mince superlatives. I'll Do Anything is better than the Mona
- Lisa. It's also pretty darned fine as a movie, though it takes
- a while to find its pace and tone. You won't miss the songs;
- this is not the husk of a musical. It is a lovely, wayward comedy
- in high Jim Brooks style, with all his pinwheeling wit and edgy
- ruminations. Who needs production numbers? I'll Do Anything
- still sings.
- </p>
- <p> Brooks has plenty to sing about. His wife Holly, their three
- young children and their Brentwood home were relatively unscathed
- by last Monday's earthquake. His Anything ordeal is over. His
- new cartoon series The Critic--created by Simpsons swamis
- Al Jean and Mike Reiss--premieres on ABC this week, preceded
- by reviewers' raves. The show, with its post-Woody Allenish
- wit and deft movie parodies, looks like a winner.
- </p>
- <p> But Brooks is less likely to sing than sigh. Just ask Polly
- Platt, executive vice president at Brooks' Gracie Films (which
- also produced Say Anything and The War of the Roses). "If I'll
- Do Anything fails," she says, "Jim will be unhappy for a month.
- If it succeeds, he will be unhappy for a year." So maybe it
- is not the best news to hear Brooks say, "I'm beginning to feel
- like myself. I'm seeing that there is a self--that I'm a person
- who does exist, a step away from the movie." And does he, finally,
- like the movie? "I do," he says, and sighs again. "I think everything
- in it is really wanting to be truthful."
- </p>
- <p> In truth there is pain; in pain there is laughter. That might
- be Brooks' motto, in comedy and life. Brooklyn-born, New Jersey-bred,
- Jim was a lonely child whose father had left home. "In I'll
- Do Anything," says Platt, "I think he is unconsciously, or consciously,
- investigating what might have happened to him had his father
- not left, if he had not been raised by his mother and sister."
- After New York University, he worked for CBS as a newswriter,
- then in 1966 moved to Los Angeles to make TV documentaries.
- Three years later, he created the series Room 222, produced
- by Allan Burns. It was a hit, and the two left to hatch a show
- for Mary Tyler Moore. That series changed TV comedy for the
- better--maybe as good as it would ever get.
- </p>
- <p> Brooks' colleagues on MTM, Taxi, The Associates, The Tracey
- Ullman Show and the ever glorious Simpsons speak in awe of his
- knack for sitcom storymaking. "He'll jump out of his chair,"
- says Reiss, "and start spilling out a story as if he's recounting
- something he's already seen. But he's making it up on the spot.
- He'll pitch the whole story, the turns it takes; the jokes are
- there, and it'll have a sweet ending. Once we started to tell
- him a Simpsons story line: Homer has to work at the Kwik-E Mart
- for Apu. Jim goes, `Oh, great. And Apu will say, "There are
- only two phrases you have to know, I assure you: `That is the
- full-size box of corn flakes' and `Shoot if you must, I don't
- know the combination to the safe.' " ' I think he writes comedy
- the way they portray Mozart writing music in Amadeus. It just
- spills out of him, fully formed."
- </p>
- <p> And when Brooks was hot, the spillage could scald people. "He
- would spew whole runs of dialogue and scenes," recalls David
- Lloyd, the brilliant comic dramatist who provided many of the
- best Mary Tyler Moore scripts, "and expect somebody to have
- taken it down. And if people lost the key words, he'd glower
- murderously at them. More than one secretary was reduced to
- tears." Brooks could find script ideas anywhere, as Lloyd recalls
- from the days of the MTM spin-off Lou Grant: "We were at a story
- conference, and I didn't have an idea in the world. Jim proceded
- to pitch to me an incident involving surgery I had had for a
- thyroid cancer. I wrote it, and I thought: I even need Jim Brooks
- to dredge up material from my own life."
- </p>
- <p> Brooks' feature films are utterly personal. He writes them alone,
- he draws characters from his own drives and insecurities, he
- creates stories for himself that he hopes audiences will like.
- The films are intimate sagas, chamber epics, where a life and
- a movie can pirouette on the subtlest default of principle.
- </p>
- <p> The hero of I'll Do Anything is Matt Hobbs (Nick Nolte), a gentle
- character actor in a career dry spell. Matt must suddenly start
- raising his troubled six-year-old daughter Jeannie (Whittni
- Wright), whom he has not seen in two years. He juggles his awkward
- responsibilities to Jeannie with his new interest in a junior
- executive (Joely Richardson) at a production company run by
- a blustery mogul (Albert Brooks), who is attracted to a truth-telling
- market researcher (Julie Kavner). Will Matt win the big role?
- Will the love teams stay united? Will the child, in a plot twist
- that echoes Broadcast News, be able to cry on camera?
- </p>
- <p> However "inside" this sounds, the film's people are complex,
- attractive and familiar; they could be working at the next desk
- or sleeping on the next pillow. They can be loved and can betray
- almost simultaneously. Matt can be both timid ("I'm actually
- afraid of my own kid") and, when defending his craft against
- a studio creep, vindictive ("You know nothing but how to pose
- for this little picture of you that nobody is snapping"). The
- insecure mogul somehow appeals to the sensitive researcher ("I
- think it's so wonderful that you don't worry about even trying
- to act strong"). All are trying to raise their moral sights
- in a business in which they must also toil to perfect the kind
- of personality they have to apologize for having.
- </p>
- <p> In his early TV days, Brooks was famous for being able to suggest
- to actors some bit of business that could save a scene or a
- show. In I'll Do Anything, he gets spot-on performances--especially
- from Nolte, who displays all the intensity that somebody who
- wants to think of himself as a nice guy dares to show, and Richardson,
- whose gorgeous, frazzled perkiness suggests a cheerleader on
- the verge of a nervous breakdown. The great turn, through, is
- from Wright, who plays a tough, often sullen kid--precariously
- poised between acting and acting up. On location, setting up
- a shot where the five-year-old wore a coat, Brooks told her,
- "This is a magic coat, Whittni. There's great acting in it."
- And he was right.
- </p>
- <p> The crucial word for Brooks, in I'll Do Anything and his other
- work, is decency; it defines the goal and the pain of most of
- those smart, middle-class folks he writes about from the inside.
- "Every character is struggling toward decency," says Brooks,
- "except for Matt, who is struggling to stay decent. That's a
- hard road for a lot of us in Hollywood. And not just out here,
- I would imagine. This is a tough time to be absolutely certain
- about moral truths. We have to be careful about what makes us
- feel good about ourselves. Saying `Good morning. How are you?'
- should not make us feel good about ourselves. Out here you can
- feel self-righteous simply by being an O.K. person, because
- you stand in stark contrast to things around you. But it's not
- enough."
- </p>
- <p> Surely not. And it's not enough for Brooks to give more pleasure
- to people than he seems to give himself. But let him suffer
- for us, so long as he creates characters neither he nor we ever
- want to let go.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-