Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004): **** out of ****
Directed by Michel Gondry. Screenplay by Charlie Kaufman. Starring Jim
Carrey, Kate Winslet, Kirsten Dunst, Mark Ruffalo, Elijah Wood and Tom
Wilkinson.
by Andy Keast
Over and over again while watching Michel Gondry's "Eternal Sunshine of the
Spotless Mind," I found myself nodding my head and smiling, identifying with
the character of Joel Barish. He's played by Jim Carrey as a mousy but
forthright man, a staple of the new Geek Cinema, the type who can be
intimidated and so easily disappointed by the 21st Century. He's also
intimidated by Clementine, who is played by Kate Winslet as one who hides
behind hair dye and loud clothes, out of either ennui or insecurity or both.
These characters harbor relationship trouble for each other, and this is a
film
that on one level is about people who would rather run from that trouble than
face it.
The screenplay by Charlie Kaufman takes a (strangely) practical approach to an
old Philip K. Dick-like idea of memory erasure. Joel walks into where
Clementine works one day to discover that she doesn't recognize him at all.
He
later receives word that Clem, for whatever reason, has had her memory of him
erased through an experimental procedure used by a psychiatrist, Dr. Mierzwiak
(Tom Wilkinson). In an act of revenge, Joel impetuously decides to return the
favor. Through an inventive sequence of events, Mierzwiak's technicians Stan
and Patrick (Mark Ruffalo and Elijah Wood) show up at Joel's apartment to
complete the brainwash.
What follows is a film that is inventive, charming and funny. Inventive in
that Gondry and Kaufman have mapped out Joel's memory as a carnival ride of
happiness and regret. This is a movie of seemingly limitless imagination. It
doesn't follow any rules but at the same time doesn't make any. Charming in
that you believe in the characters, who make the film more accessible than any
other film written by Kaufman. Funny in the way that the film treats the
absurd as commonplace in everyday life -and not vice versa as most comedies
do.
For example, when Barish visits the brainwashing clinic for the first time,
it's a cramped, lived-in office space (the waiting room is identical to the
one
at my dentist's office) and not a product of the futurisms you think of when
you're told the words "science fiction."
The four other films penned by Kaufman I've enjoyed (both "Being John
Malkovich" and "Adaptation" were on my top ten lists for 1999 and 2002), but
mostly as novelties. They were films had could not have been made in any
conventional way. The average Kaufman screenplay maintains such a pitch of
cynicism that I end up enjoying the novelty, and not relating to anything that
happens. For one of his scripts to resonate with me, as this one did, is
almost like discovering the writer anew. I dated a girl who was not
dissimilar
to Clementine: always "outgoing" for the sake of being outgoing, "different"
only to be different. She was also frivolous and vindictive. It didn't work
out, but if given the opportunity to burn my memory of her away perpetually,
would I?
Michel Gondry has proven himself, I believe, with this film. His directing
moves seamlessly through irony and absurdity, and gives us passages that
capture that implacable excitement of meeting The New Person. His visual
style
projects the fragmented, bits-and-pieces way we catalog our memories, perhaps
because in addition to being mental documents, they are also mental
constructs.
We recall only the things we care to, our way. Watching it, I was taken back
to another relationship of mine, one that was very much like a marriage. I
can
recall the exact date, time and location we met. I can describe with perfect
accuracy what we were both wearing, the topics of conversation and what the
weather was like. *That* is what "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" is
all about.
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X-RT-RatingText: 4/4
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