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- <text id=94TT0916>
- <title>
- Jul. 11, 1994: Cinema:Hollywood's Last Decent Man
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 11, 1994 From Russia, With Venom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/CINEMA, Page 58
- Hollywood's Last Decent Man
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> In the sprawling Forrest Gump, Oscar winner Tom Hanks again
- displays his quiet magnetism
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <p> Forrest Gump is nobody special, but he meets special people.
- In his 30-year odyssey through recent American history, this
- crippled Alabama lad with a 75 IQ bumps into Elvis and John
- Lennon, J.F.K. and L.B.J., Nixon and Mao. Forrest is an innocent
- on loan to a cynical world, and in the movie bearing his name
- he would make little sense if he were played by anyone but Tom
- Hanks.
- </p>
- <p> Hanks, 38 this week, is the actor who takes dangerous themes
- or recycled plots and, with his craft and decency, makes them
- esteemed hits. The rare flops (Punchline, The Bonfire of the
- Vanities) don't stick to him, and his past three films (A League
- of Their Own, Sleepless in Seattle, Philadelphia) have earned
- $310 million at the domestic box office. Now Hollywood routinely
- assigns its Missions Impossible to Captain Nice.
- </p>
- <p> Nice is not a quality often associated with movie actors. Today's
- typical film star--Arnold, Jack or post-modern Keanu--radiates
- danger; he's a wild guy to take a wild ride with. The nice guy
- is on TV: he's the genial, comfortable friend you want to invite
- into your home each week. They are two distinct breeds, the
- domesticated husband of TV and the movies' demon lover. One
- does the dishes, the other smashes them.
- </p>
- <p> Hanks is a TV type who made a big splash in movies (first in
- Splash, then in Big). He is a throwback to old Hollywood, when
- everybody went to the movies, when movies were the world's TV,
- when the norm was more...normal. Back then, quiet types like
- Henry Fonda and Gary Cooper played the extraordinary ordinary
- man. That's Hanks. Offscreen, apparently, he leads a calm, happy
- life. Onscreen, he is less likely to explode than to simmer
- and smile. With his suburban niceness and elusive, rubberized
- features--any photo of him is bound to look smudged--he
- is a '40s fella for the '90s.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly any Hanks character is an intelligent guy who wants to
- make sense out of the chaos of his life, trying to sustain his
- dignity when everything has gone horribly weird. He's your best
- self having your worst day. You are, for example, a man who
- must dress in drag (in Hanks' 1981 TV series Bosom Buddies).
- You're a 12-year-old kid who literally grows up overnight (Big).
- You're a detective whose top informant is a slobbery dog (Turner
- & Hooch). You're the manager of a baseball team, and your players
- are all girls (A League of Their Own). Or your girlfriend is
- a fish (Splash). Your wife has died (Sleepless in Seattle).
- You think you're dying (Joe Versus the Volcano). You are dying
- (Philadelphia). Whether the dilemma is fantastic or tragic,
- Hanks gives it an apt, gentle heft.
- </p>
- <p> Like the best movie actors, Hanks is a superb reactor. His theater-trained
- voice often breaks into gentlemanly whining. His fretful brow
- expresses perplexity--a thoughtful "Huh?" And then, in the
- subtlest shift, comic exasperation plummets into agony. Hanks
- justified his Philadelphia Oscar in one early scene outside
- Denzel Washington's law office. With no more than a long, longing
- look, he registers the despair of a dying man who feels utterly
- bereft, unheard, dismissed. This lovely little revelation has
- an antecedent in Big, when the overgrown kid sits alone in a
- creepy hotel room and ponders his dreadful solitude. He's wonderful
- at portraying someone who's just been sucker-punched by fate.
- </p>
- <p> Hanks is a kid again in director Robert Zemeckis' Forrest Gump.
- Slow-witted and likable, Forrest races through the rubble of
- the '50s, '60s and '70s. Thanks to novelist Winston Groom's
- cunning plot (Eric Roth wrote the script) and some nifty visual
- effects, Forrest pops up in many a historic venue: with George
- Wallace at the schoolhouse door, in the seared rice fields of
- Vietnam, along the Great Wall of China, at the Watergate Hotel
- during a third-rate burglary. As his mother and his pals die
- around him, he pursues his life's love; the movie might be called
- Four Funerals and a Wedding.
- </p>
- <p> Like the new Wyatt Earp, this episodic ersatz epic feels more
- like a mini-series than a movie. It's a long drink of water
- at the fountain of pop-social memory. It wants to find an optimism
- in survival: if we somehow got through the past 35 years, we
- must be O.K. So Forrest comes across as a sweeter Zelig, a candied
- Candide, as the film strains to find America's inner child.
- But Hanks holds it together because he is working to discover
- Forrest's inner adult--the mature man under his infantile
- guilelessness. This effort pays off magnificently in Forrest's
- climactic declaration of love. Hanks' tone is both operatic
- and judicious; he makes passionate sentiment seem the highest
- form of common sense.
- </p>
- <p> Other stars attract audiences by saving the world or stopping
- a runaway bus. A Hanks movie deals with more mundane imperatives:
- doing your job, staying alive, getting the girl. Simple things
- seem unattainable; when attained, they feel sublime.
- </p>
- <p> In Splash, Hanks sits at a bar and pours out his lace-valentine
- heart: "I wanna meet a woman and I wanna fall in love and I
- wanna get married and I wanna have a kid and I wanna go see
- him play a tooth in the school play. It's not much." But to
- ordinary, unique people--the folks Hanks appeals to, and the
- folks he so smartly plays--it's everything.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-