Film Review
Bullets over Broadway is the kind of film that Woody Allen could make
in his sleep, an exuberant period farce replete with colourful characters
and acres of snappy dialogue. It's not a profound film, it's not even
particularly original, but it is unflaggingly entertaining, as enjoyable
as anything that Allen has so far given us. The characters, the sets,
even the story look as if they have been ripped wholesale from a compendium
of stories by Damon Runyon, the writer whose wacky take on Broadway life
on the eve of the Wall Street crash was given the glossy movie treatment
a few years previously, in Howard Brookner's
Bloodhounds of Broadway
(1989). Beneath the lurid Runyonesque trappings there are some
typically Allenesque musings on the relationship between art and life and
how far the two should be allowed to impinge on one another.
Few would argue with Allen's oft-repeated observation that an artist creates
his own moral universe, but does that imply that an artist is morally free
to do anything to ensure he achieves his aims? Can, for example, he
commit murder for art's sake? You could argue that, if art has no moral
boundaries, it ceases to have any place in the sphere of human affairs and
becomes totally redundant, for we are all, consciously or otherwise, bound
by tangible moral precepts.
Bullets Over Broadway has us wending
our way through this thorny philosophical maze without reaching any definite
conclusion, other than to churn out a glib coda which bleats (unconvincingly)
that a man who is not prepared to kill or be killed for his art has no right
to call himself an artist.
Rather than get bogged down in the intellectual conundrums that they cheerfully
raise but fail to come to grips with, Allen and his companion screenwriter
Douglas McGrath focus most of their energy on making us laugh, for the most
part gloriously mocking the pretensions of theatre folk (the same pretensions
that are as rife today as they were back in the roaring '20s). Dianne
Wiest's character is the fullest embodiment of the faded star hoping for
a comeback, a tragicomic Norma Desmond type who is sustained only by an insane
belief that she is destined for a second bout of stardom. Wiest's sympathetic
portrayal of Helen Sinclair makes her more than just an egregious archetype
and it is fitting that she won an Academy Award for her performance (her
previous Oscar win being for another Woody Allen film,
Hannah and Her Sisters (1986)).
The other characters are somewhat less fully developed and less believable
than Wiest's, much more prone to lazy caricature in both the writing and
the acting. Jennifer Tilly's screechy voiced Olive is such an irritating,
over-the-top grotesque that we are glad to see the back of her (the only
surprise is how long she lasts into the film), and John Cusack's idealistic,
too full-of-himself writer offers no surprises, just the obvious slew of
dreary clichés arranged with mathematical predictability. Jim
Broadbent is a welcome wild card addition to the motley ensemble of well-worn
archetypes, his role being little more than to service a running gag about
a man with a chronic eating disorder. Joe Viterelli and Chazz Palminteri
comfortably inhabit stock gangster caricatures straight out of a second rate
caper movie of the 1930s, but they at least bring a touch of class to the
proceedings. Most of the rest of the cast fail to have any real impact,
although this is more a reflection of the complacent writing than the quality
of the acting. Harvey Fierstein, Mary-Louise Parker and Tracey Ullman
each brings lustre to the ensemble but individually they end up getting lost
in the crowd.
Lacking in depth and coherence,
Bullets over Broadway is hardly first
rate Woody Allen but it is without doubt one of the writer-director's most
spirited and entertaining comedies, one that you can easily watch time and
again without ever growing tired of it. Prompted by his sister, Letty
Aronson, Allen capitalised on the film's enduring popular appeal by turning
it into a stage musical (imaginatively titled
Bullets Over Broadway - The
Musical). This premiered on Broadway in 2014 and, after receiving
some mixed reviews, had a run of 156 performances.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Woody Allen film:
Mighty Aphrodite (1995)
Film Synopsis
New York City, 1928. David Shayne is an aspiring young playwright who
is determined to make a name for himself on Broadway without compromising
his principles. He has written a socially meaningful play,
God of
Our Fathers, which he knows will be a hit, but he can't find a backer.
In the end, he is forced to swallow his pride and accept money from big-shot
hoodlum Nick Valenti in return for giving a big role in the play to the latter's
ditsy girlfriend, Olive Neal. To protect his investment, Valenti provides
Olive with a personal bodyguard, in the form of his strong-arm man Cheech.
Whilst Olive's complete lack of acting ability depresses him, David is happy
with the rest of his cast, particularly his choice of leading lady, Helen
Sinclair, a faded star of Broadway hoping for a big comeback. David
finds himself drawn to Helen, even though he is much younger than she is
and is already in a relationship with another woman. As rehearsals get underway
and tempers start to fray some major flaws in the play soon become apparent,
but help comes from an unlikely quarter. The only person who seems
to know what is wrong with the play and how to fix it is Cheech. Before
David knows it, the supposedly dumb bodyguard has taken creative control
of his work and is ready to take some drastic measures to ensure its success...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.