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Wednesday, July 29,2009

Stand-Up Falls Flat

Apatow ruins Sandler’s comic rep, while the Scandinavian artiste soars with 'You, the Living'

By Armond White
. . . . . . .

 

Funny People
Directed by Judd Apatow
Runtime: 146 min.

You, the Living
Directed by Roy Andersson
At Film Forum, July 29-Aug. 11
Runtime: 95 min.

 

 

MORE LAUGHS—belly-deep, thought-provoking ones—are to be had in the first 10 minutes of Roy Andersson’s You, the Living than in all of Judd Apatow’s Funny People. If this suggests that Hollywood’s current comedy kingpin is a less effective humorist than some relatively unknown Swedish cinema artiste who quotes Goethe, here’s why: Andersson’s a filmmaker of genuine accomplishment, Apatow is a TV hack out of water.

Apatow’s delusion that he makes movies begins with his overlong scripts: The 40- Year-Old Virgin only gave it up at 116 minutes; Knocked-Up was stillborn at 129 minutes and Funny People runs a bone-dry 146 minutes.This violates the basic standup,TV sit-com rule to git ‘er dun. Apatow stretches his plots as if length equals depth.

Funny People’s story of celebrity-comic George Simmons (Adam Sandler) dealing with his terminal illness by hiring younger upcoming comic Ira Wright (Seth Rogen) as his confidante and gag-writer, overextends its premise, milking sympathy in-between jokes. If I gave away the outcome, only a moron would consider it a spoiler; the real spoiler is Apatow’s shallow view of impending death and redemption. He has a TV shark’s fear of losing his audience and so refuses to challenge it. By contrast, Roy Andersson seeks a patient, thoughtful audience. You, the Living doesn’t build-in commercial breaks. Andersson’s bold comic method is best described as:WAIT FOR IT. Rarely moving the camera, but packing the frame with precise, detailed imagery, he lets the ideas and emotions in a scene build to an empathetic punchline.The opening shows quarreling lovers—bulbous, middle-aged, tattooed former hipsters—walking their small dog as the woman regrets her life (“Nobody understands me”) and the man pacifies her despair: a relationship that’s grown past excitement and arrived at tolerant banality. Andersson’s unique vision of Scandinavian ennui catches the exact moment of exasperation as assorted citizens suffer through daily life.When you grasp Andersson’s truth, laughter erupts as an irresistible and explosive recognition.


Funny People pretends to be about facing up to death and the way humans dispute their obligations to each other, but the result of Simmons’ antagonism toward Ira and his intrusion on ex-girlfriend Laura’s (Leslie Mann) marriage merely indulges the egotism of Hollywood stand-up comedy types—Apatow’s biggest admirers next to New York media elites.


Andersson avoids death and cites Life as his theme; he offers a wise understanding of the common miseries that people share everyday.Way beyond Apatow’s sitcom sanctimony, Andersson assesses the difficulty of average relationships: scenes of a man changing positions in a queue, a man breaking his own ceiling to stop his upstairs neighbor’s noise, a bureaucrat interrupting his public celebration to deal with an ungrateful son or a religious woman praying, praying, praying for the incorrigible human race to depict the range of human futility— and by acknowledging it, lightens the load. Trite Apatow constantly lets us know he’s “serious” by ruining Adam Sandler’s heretofore-admirable effort to bring meaning and sincerity to movie comedy. Simmons is the dullest performance of Sandler’s career; his passive-aggression is drab rather than peremptory. Using jokes to mask dissatisfaction displays his contempt.That’s because Apatow thinks that admitting one’s own lucrative opportunism absolves it. Ira’s subplot competition with his more successful roommates (Jason Schwartzman and Jonah Hill as sitcom actors) makes the small revelation of professional envy. Apatow softsoaps the mean covetousness that sitcom stars can’t overcome.

This depiction of Hollywood luxe and misery lacks moral scale (Sandler went deeper in James Brooks’ near-masterpiece Spanglish). Apatow doesn’t penetrate the irony of middle-class dissatisfaction, which is Andersson’s ace. You, the Living’s shifting cast of characters go from frustration to complacency—note the forbearance of office workers, a groupie and a mother-in-law.

But Apatow’s whiny characters pitch audiences into a vat of self-pity. He does nothing with Simmons calling out Ira (born Weiner) on, “You’re hiding some Judaism.” No doubt Apatow wants to celebrate a successful comic’s triumph over ethnic baggage, but the only interesting part of the two jokers’ relationship is Simmons’ noting, “Your generation worries about divorce, I worried about my dad hitting me with a baseball bat.”Taking ethnic and class trauma in stride makes Funny People ultimately useless.

One of Andersson’s characters, a psychiatrist, complains about, “Hour after hour trying to make a mean person happy; there’s no point.”That observation obliterates Funny People because Apatow is unprepared to deal with the hostility behind stand-up.

He carefully illustrates stand-up lore: Simmons and Ira’s abodes are decorated with icons of Redd Foxx, Rodney Dangerfield, Bill Cosby and John Belushi. Plus, there are as many guest-star cameos as in a TV season. (Eminem’s belligerent rant left the audience silent, unconvinced.) It’s a mistake to think Apatow is scrutinizing stand-up’s nouveau-riche milieu; calling upon legions of comic friends—and Apatow’s own family (his wife and two daughters in home-video clips)—simply advertises it. But Andersson’s sense of family life is strikingly specific, like when a cement-layer dreams a humiliating dinner party and trial (“Maybe we should eat first,” a child warns).

You, the Living has a deceptively odd look:The lackluster color scheme is paradoxically full of emotion and the sallow characters full of life. Andersson masters the art of caricature; like Daumier, George Tooker or Roz Chast, he loads each frame with ideas: at least five things are going on in every shot. Compare this to the glossy look Apatow uses. His Hollywood hitmaker status commands such big-dick posturing that he hires Oscar-winning cinematographer Janusz Kaminski to class-up his script. Kaminski gilds Apatow’s turd the way Sven Nykvist cashed a paycheck shooting for Nora Ephron.

 

  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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Posted at 08/20/2009 
 
I have not seen Funny People, so I can't comment on whether or not I agree with White's take on it. I will say however, that although I usually do not agree with White's particular tastes in films (although You, the Living is brilliant) I don't understand why everyone is constanly coming on this website and asking for Armand White to be fired. Obviously you people are reading his reviews, no one is making you read them, and since Mr. White has freedom of speech, I don't understand why he should be fired just because you don't agree with him.

 

Posted at 08/12/2009 
 
Armond, you are an idiot. Case closed. PS: See this movie, as with all other movies this guy says are terrible, because they are all usually great. I believe this man has a secret agenda of trying to keep good stuff away from good people. He should be fired.

 

Posted at 08/12/2009 
 
I haven't seen Funny People, but most of Adam Sandler's films have been puerile and juvenile. That this reviewer felt that this movie was the low point of his career, and is a fan of his previous work suggests that Funny People must easily be the best of Sandler's movies.

 

Posted at 08/03/2009 
 
What more proof does anyone need that the internet was made for stupid white trash? Seems like a comments section can't go by on any web site without the N-word or some other unprovoked anti-black comments being spewed forth, whether it's YouTube, Topix, Curbed.com, IMDB, the rants and raves section of Craig's List, or even fluffy gossip sites like The Superficial or Perez Hilton. It's like you all have this bizarre form of Tourrette's Syndrome, where if even the story is mildly related to a black person or other minority, you have to go on a bizarre, vomitous rant. Well, you all can go eff yourselves, you basement dwelling, trailer trash living, sibling humping pieces of garbage. No matter how many times you spew forth the N-word or throw out some racial slur on the internet like some badass, in real life you're still going to be a fearful, weak, pathetic shell of a human being who feels nothing but fear when you walk down the street and see someone who's different from you. How sad is that? How pathetic is your existence, to be mired in nothing but fear and dread?

 

Posted at 07/31/2009 
 
I think at this point it is safe to say that having a comment section under Armond's writings has been a failed experiment. The ratio of sensible to idiotic comments has been so hopelessly skewed toward the latter that I cannot see any reason to justify its continued existance. If stupid were a disease, we would have ground zero for a pandemic here. It was a nice idea to have this but enough is enough. Its time to shut it down.

 

Posted at 07/31/2009 
No dude, seriously, that is how it works. Type in 'anonymous' as the username and password and you can see for yourself.

 

Posted at 07/31/2009 
Sure it is John, now I know you are a little embarrassed and maybe you would like to take back some of the nasty things you said. Well in my books an apology is still worth it's weight in hugs. Go on, don't be shy...

 

Posted at 07/31/2009 
I don't know who you think I am, but John Doe is just the name given to anyone who isn't registered.

 

Posted at 07/31/2009 
Wow, John Doe, you certainly have changed your tune with this post. I'm glad to see you have grown as a person, or perhaps you were simply having a bad morning.

 

 
 


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