BIG FISH
--------
'When the legend becomes fact, print the legend'
Maxwell Scott, "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance"
William Bloom (Billy Crudup, "Almost Famous") became estranged from his
wildly popular father Ed (Albert Finney, "Erin Brockovich") after one too
many of his important achievements were overwhelmed by his dad's
frequently-told tall tales. After many years living in Paris with his
French wife Josephine (Marion Cotillard, "Taxi 3"), William learns from his
mother, Sandra (Jessica Lange, "Titus"), that his dad is dying and it is
time for William to try and make his peace with the "Big Fish."
Tim Burton rebounds, if not spectacularly, with his homey, comedic Southern
gothic rumination on the power of myth-making. Burton's direction of John
August's ("Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle") adaptation of the Daniel
Wallace novel is episodic and tonally uneven in its acting, but he socks
over an emotional payoff with the film's conclusion.
William Bloom's life and heritage have been embroidered from the day he was
born, which Ed immortalized with the tale of his encounter of a legendary,
female catfish. 'The only way to catch an uncatchable woman is to offer
her a wedding ring,' he says, recounting how he had used his as a lure,
then let the big fish go so as not to incur the wrath of his beloved. Will
and his pregnant wife's presence at Ed's bedside presents the opportunity
for Ed to go over his life story once more and Burton flashes back and
forth weaving his tale like the storytelling of Rob Reiner's "The Princess
Bride" with more present day action and less linearity.
As a child, Ed dared a visit to a one-eyed witch (Helena Bonham Carter,
"The Heart of Me") whose glass eye was said to foretell one's own death.
After his buddies fates are shown, Ed's is hidden from us, but his reaction
lets us know that this vision will empower him for years to come. He
describes a radical growth spurt that kept him in traction (in a machine
that looks like a product of "Edward Scissorhands's" Inventor Vincent
Price's lab, one of the few truly Burtonesque visual touchstones) for
years. Then, as a young man (Ewan McGregor, "Moulin Rouge"), he takes on a
real, cave-dwelling monster that's been eating everything in town. But
that real giant, Karl (Matthew McGrory, "House of 1000 Corpses"), is onto
Ed's psychology, so Ed decides to get the nuisance out of town by
accompanying him himself. Ashton, North Carolina throws a parade to escort
the duo out and the witch appears to offer Ed one last piece of advice -
that the way to become the biggest fish is never to be caught.
Ed takes a detour that leads him into the timeless town of Spectre, whose
denizens's shoes all dangle from a power line while they happily cavort
barefoot on streets of grass. After observing famous poet Norther
Winslow's (Steve Buscemi, "Mr. Deeds") inability to finish a poem and being
told by Mildred (Missi Pyle, "Bringing Down the House") that he's quite a
catch, Ed decides to hightail it out of there, but not before promising
young Jenny (Hailey Anne Nelson) that he'll return someday. Ed and Karl
then fall upon a circus where Karl is particularly welcomed, towering over
ringleader/owner Amos's (Danny DeVito, "Death to Smoochy") Colossus by
several feet. There, Ed catches a glimpse of the girl he believes he is
destined to marry (Alison Lohman, "Matchstick Men," as the young Sandra),
and he agrees to work for Amos free, receiving one tidbit of information
about her each month. A magical courtship later, Ed has a stint in the
Korean War which he escapes with the help of conjoined Korean singing twins
Ping (Ada Tai, "Rush Hour") and Jing (Arlene Tai, "Rush Hour") before
becoming a traveling salesman who once again finds Spectre and Jenny
(Helena Bonham Carter again), now fallen upon hard times.
The wonderful Albert Finney is beautifully cast as the unrepentant charmer.
Even though Finney spends most of the film bed-ridden, his Ed is a life
force, obviously still madly in love with his wife (he and the woefully
underutilized Lange have one marvelous scene in a bathtub). When Ed lures
his foreign daughter-in-law in with an elaborate version of a hoary old
joke, Finney even caught me unawares with the punchline. Yet while Finney
is brilliantly paired up physically with McGregor, McGregor is a major
disappointment portraying the younger version of the character. McGregor
is all shiny surface optimism, lacking the layers Finney gives the
character. Lohman is more successful standing in for Lange, capturing the
older actress's essence. What an amazing year for the actress, believably
playing a thirteen year old in "Matchstick Men" and a woman of marriageable
age here. Billy Crudup, a talented actor, is miscast, neither looking like
the progeny of Ed and Sandra, nor ever seeming comfortable in the role of
the unforgiving son. McGrory, Buscemi (who makes an amusing reappearance
in Ed's tales), DeVito, and Bonham Carter are all pluses in the supporting
arena. Robert Guillaume (TV's "Benson") is solid as the long time family
doctor, although it is highly questionable that a black man would have been
allowed to work as a white woman's obstetrician in the 1930's South.
Production designer Dennis Gassner ("Road to Perdition") does not deliver a
Burtonesque landscape, with Amos's traveling circus a particularly missed
opportunity. Cinematography by Philippe Rousselot ("Planet of the Apes")'s
palette meanders from brilliantly bright (a field of daffodils) to limply
pallid (Ed's first meeting with Karl). Original Music by Danny Elfman
("Hulk") is comfortably expected.
Burton does a good job continuing to touch upon the film's themes
throughout the film (the woman/fish/Eve metaphor, the tradition of
storytelling and its cultural commonalities), but Ed's past is delivered in
fits and starts and the love story, which is central, is largely abandoned
in the present, leaving a gaping hole. Burton seems unsure of himself here
and the film lacks his usual sharp directorial vision - it would have been
interesting to see what the Coen brothers would have done with this
material. Still, when "Big Fish" comes to its thoroughly expected
conclusion, it is quite satisfying nonetheless.
B-
For more Reeling reviews visit http://www.reelingreviews.com
==========
X-RAMR-ID: 36495
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1227531
X-RT-TitleID: 1127787
X-RT-SourceID: 386
X-RT-AuthorID: 1487
X-RT-RatingText: B-
NOTE: This review was posted on the usenet
to the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup.
Mooviees.com accepts no responsibility for the contents of the review.
Unless stated otherwise, the copyright belongs to the author.