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- <text id=93TT0319>
- <title>
- Oct. 04, 1993: The Heart Of American Darkness
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 80
- The Heart Of American Darkness
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Robert Altman's panoramic Short Cuts is a richly pulsating human
- comedy
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD SCHICKEL--With reporting by Jeffrey Ressner/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Robert Altman's Short Cuts--one of the season's most widely
- anticipated films--opens with shots of helicopters, photographed
- so they look like giant bugs as they roar across the night skies,
- doing battle with a little bug, the Medfly, terror of the California
- fruit industry. This periodic chemical warfare, in which insecticides
- are noisily laid down across entire neighborhoods, is one of
- the minor, faintly comic annoyances of Los Angeles life. All
- that technology; such a humble and primitive foe.
- </p>
- <p> The film ends with an earthquake rumbling across L.A. Such periodic
- seismic uproars are, of course, something more than an annoyance.
- There's nothing funny about them and no technology to fight
- them. They are nature's blunt reminder that life in L.A. is
- transitory, that the very ground under one's feet is not to
- be trusted.
- </p>
- <p> The temblor shakes the lives of everyone still alive at the
- conclusion of the movie. But not more so than the events they
- have endured prior to it. Among the characters: the grieving
- parents of a little boy who dies mysteriously after a hit-and-run
- accident from which he calmly walked away; a group of fishermen
- who steadfastly pursue their sport despite a dead body floating
- in their favorite fishing hole; a woman who runs a telephone
- sex service while tending her children and sexually ignoring
- her husband (ultimately with terrible results); a wide variety
- of men and women who are cheating or have cheated on their spouses.
- These people mostly have bad jobs or no jobs. Some drink too
- much. Some are lonely. Some are depressed or angry. But all
- are "normal" in the faces they present to the world.
- </p>
- <p> Everything about Short Cuts, which runs 3 hr. 9 min., recounts
- no less than eight stories and deploys 24 major actors, signals
- large aspiration and a desire to present a panoramic vision
- of life in what everyone is now pleased to think of as the heart
- of American darkness. Los Angeles, the city that has in a wink
- of history's eye ceased to be Everyman's Great Utopia, has become
- instead everyone's Great Dystopia.
- </p>
- <p> Whether the film, which has the prestigious opening-night slot
- at the New York Film Festival this Friday, achieves its highest
- aims is likely to prove hotly debatable as it rolls slowly into
- theaters during the fall. L.A. is, after all, the world's easiest
- satirical target. Moreover, Altman and co-screenwriter Frank
- Barhydt are adapting--freely commingling is a better description--short stories by the late Raymond Carver. These have quite
- a different bleakness about them and are, anyway, resistant
- to the implicit cultural generalizations the movie tries to
- impose on them. Carver was content to capture discrete moments
- of confusion and loss in everyday, mostly lower-middle-class
- lives, rendered in spare, sparsely populated stories. His manner
- rigorously excluded direct emotional comment on the behavior
- of his people. Or, for that matter, ironic observations about
- it.
- </p>
- <p> Altman, in contrast, is an exuberant inclusionist. His best
- and most characteristic films (MASH, Nashville, The Player)
- teem with characters bouncing from one level to another of multilayered
- stories that are full of chance encounters and crazy coincidences.
- "There's something about this mural-type film that interests
- me," he says simply. It was--what else?--chance that brought
- Altman to Carver. He asked his secretary for reading matter
- for a transatlantic flight, and she provided several collections
- of Carver's stories. Dipping in and out of them as he dropped
- in and out of sleep, Altman found that by the end of the flight
- they had all homogenized. "I really couldn't remember one from
- the other," he says. But he did realize, "My God, this is a
- movie." Specifically, an Altman movie.
- </p>
- <p> Maybe Altman gives Carver's people more interesting or eccentric
- jobs than they originally had; maybe he condescends to them
- occasionally; maybe one story that is his own and Barhydt's
- invention is melodramatically overweening. Nevertheless, this
- movie works. In part, that's because Altman and Carver do share
- one important characteristic: short attention spans. They like
- to touch a moment and move quickly on. True to his title, Altman
- does not linger on any of his stories. Nobody is ever on long
- enough to grow tedious, and his linkages between stories (the
- screenwriters used color-coded file cards pinned to a bulletin
- board to keep them straight) are wonderfully inventive and set
- up very curious resonances. "I kind of wish it were shorter,"
- says Altman, "but this is what it is. It's like having a kid
- who's seven feet tall. What do you do? You buy him a new bed
- and hope he can play basketball."
- </p>
- <p> If Altman's impatience with conventional narrative animates
- his film, so does his patience with and trust of actors. He's
- always been a man who encourages his performers to riff on a
- script's themes, and they respond with astonishing brio. "This
- movie was like a symphony, with Bob serving as the conductor,"
- says one of his featured players, Matthew Modine. "It created
- a tremendous amount of pressure because you have to understand
- where you're at, when you come in, and what your role is. It's
- like a musician standing in front of these two big timpani drums.
- All he may have to do is hit them two times, but there's a tremendous
- potential for missing his cue and throwing everything off."
- Says Altman: "These parts aren't found in everyday movies. Here,
- suddenly, the actors can really create a character and play
- the moment, without worrying that they have to murder someone
- in the third act."
- </p>
- <p> It may be unfair to single anyone out of this extraordinary
- cast, but the lunatic self-assurance of Tim Robbins as a motorcycle
- cop stealing his own children's dog (he hates the mutt), conducting
- an affair and covering his absences with tall tales of undercover
- drug investigations is hatefully hilarious. His braying boldness
- represents one emotional extreme in the picture. The other (the
- one that touches the most lives, and whose story is structurally
- the center of the film) is played, with great delicacy, by Andie
- MacDowell and Bruce Davison as the couple trying to cope with
- their child's hit-and-run accident.
- </p>
- <p> Between these poles, Jack Lemmon contributes a self-justifying
- monologue about a long-ago but devastating marital infidelity
- that is haunting in its self-delusions. Jennifer Jason Leigh
- as the mom with a sideline in dirty talk and Anne Archer as
- a woman whose part-time job is clowning for school kids superbly
- represent lower-middle-class economic desperation. And then
- there's Julianne Moore, whose doctor-husband (Modine) obsessively
- pesters her about a one-night stand she may or may not have
- had years ago. When she finally makes her long confession, she
- is half-naked--a brave actor's choice, signaling not eroticism
- but vulnerability.
- </p>
- <p> That quality is Short Cuts' great redeeming grace. But it is
- Altman's refusal to linger on it sentimentally, his joyous appreciation
- of his actors' wicked inventiveness, and everyone's passionate,
- quick-witted desire to expose the vagaries of human behavior
- under quotidian pressure that simply sweep you up and sweep
- away whatever doubts you may have about its grand design. It
- is, finally, as a richly pulsating, hugely entertaining human
- comedy--antic, wayward, glancing--that Short Cuts bemuses,
- amuses and finally entrances us.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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