Film Review
It was the sitcom
Mork & Mindy
that made Robin Williams a national star in the late 1970s. It
wasn't until the late 1980s that he made it big in the movies, with a
tailor-made part in Barry Levinson's
Good
Morning, Vietnam (1987). In the interim, Williams had
grown in stature to become one of the most highly rated stand-up
comedians in America, and it is his flair for spontaneous lunatic
comedy that is so ruthlessly exploited by Levinson in his film.
Williams was given free rein to improvise many of his comedy scenes in
the film and the results are, as you might expect, deliriously
funny. But this isn't his most significant achievement. The
film gave Williams the chance to immerse himself in a complex character
that isn't too far removed from his own. Whether he was
consciously giving us a glimpse of what lies beneath the comedy persona
or whether he was being duped into doing so by his director, we shall
never know. What is certain is that the comic actor turns in an
extraordinarily revealing character portrayal of a vulnerable man who
uses comedy to insulate himself from the brutal realities of
life. It is hard to know where Robin Williams ends and Adrian
Cronauer takes over.
Were it not for Williams' totally brilliant star turn
Good Morning, Vietnam would be just
a fairly average wartime comedy, a pretty half-hearted attempt to
repeat the success of Robert Altman's
M*A*S*H (1970) with the
location shifted to the Vietnam War. Despite some notable
supporting performances (Bruno Kirby is hilarious as the psychotically
humourless lieutenant with a deadly Polka fixation) the secondary
characters are inadequately developed and barely register as more than
bland caricatures. With a genius gag merchant of Williams'
standing at the wheel of the comedy juggernaut the humour is never in
short supply, but once the film takes a sudden detour into
dramatic/sentimental territory the credibility gap suddenly becomes
noticeable. The fault lies not with Williams - who proves himself
to be a remarkably capable dramatic actor - but with the script which
lacks depth and crowbars in an undesirable slab of Hollwood-style
mawkishness into the proceedings. The overly sentimental strains
in Alex North's score only makes this unbearably apparent.
Even as late as the mid-1980s the Vietnam War was still a highly
contentious topic, one which American film directors and writers were
reluctant to tangle with.
The Deer Hunter (1978) and
Apocalypse
Now (1979), the first films to accurately portray the
horrors and insanity of the war, were highly controversial and garnered
mixed reviews when they came out.
Good Morning, Vietnam was the
first film to make light of the conflict and you can understand why its
authors erred on the side of caution when it came to poking fun at this
most unsuccessful and costly of military escapades. A war that
cost the lives of over four million people, including 58,000
American servicemen, is not something that naturally lends itself to
comedy. Today, almost thirty years on, the film's lack of
satirical bite is mildly disappointing and it seems almost indecent
that it should offer all but the flimsiest of critiques of America's
involvement in Vietnam. But should we be bothered by
this? For all its sins,
Good
Morning, Vietnam still manages to be uproariously funny -
thanks to its prime asset, Robin Williams at the height of his comedic
powers.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Saigon, 1965. During the Vietnam War, American Airman Adrian
Cronauer is seconded to work as a disc jockey for the Armed Forces
Radio service. Cronauer's mix of irreverent humour and trendy pop
music proves highly popular with the servicemen who tune into him but
brings him into conflict with his superiors. Lieutenant Steven
Hauk's attempt to oust Cronauer so that he can take his place and
indulge his polka fetish backfires and the anarchic DJ is hastily
reinstated. Of duty, Cronauer encounters an attractive Vietnamese
girl named Trinh and takes over an English class so that he can get to
know her. Trinh's younger brother Tuan tries to dissuade the DJ
from pursuing his sister but the two quickly become friends. When
Cronauer's superiors discover that he has unintentionally befriended an
active member of the Viet Cong his days as Vietnam's most popular DJ
are numbered...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.