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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| I LOVE YOU PHILLIP MORRIS (director/writer: and Glenn Ficarra; screenwriter: based on the book by Steve McVicker; cinematographer: Xavier Pérez Grobet; editor: Thomas J. Nordberg; music: Nick Urata; cast: (Steven Russell), (Phillip Morris), (Debbie), Rodrigo Santoro (Jimmy), Antoni Corone (Dan Lindholm), Brennan Brown (Birkheim), Michael Mandel (Cleavon), (Eudora); Runtime: 100; MPAA Rating: R; producers: Andrew Lazar/Far Shariat; Roadside Attractions; 2009) |
| "You
couldn't make this story up, as the truth proves to
be stranger than
fiction."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz A bizarre dramedy
based on
the real-life story of a con man, Steven Russell (). It plays out as a daffy
social satire
and love story, and a risk taking pic for Carrey who
has ambitions to
cross-over from buffoonish commercial ventures to
artistic pics. It's
co-written and co-directed by
and Glenn Ficarra (they wrote the screenplay for the
alternative
Christmas classic Bad Santa), and is based on
the book by Steve McVicker--a
former
investigative reporter for The Houston Chronicle. It serves as an acting
exercise for
Carrey, who dives right into the role of the love
starved gay man with
the schizoid personality of a charlatan and a sincere
romantic. The pic is framed
around
Steven Russell waiting to die in a hospital bed and
narrating his life
story, and telling us in a comically serious tone
“Love’s the reason
I’m layin’ here dyin’.” At an early age Steven
learns
he was adopted. He becomes a Virginia Beach police
officer because he's
obsessed with locating his real mother, and figures a
cop will have
access to getting records an ordinary citizen doesn't
have. Steven
sings in the church choir, is happily married to ditsy
Bible-thumper
Debbie () and has
two young
children; but is gay and secretly has many gay lovers.
When Steven is
injured in a near-fatal car accident, while rushing to
see one of his
male lovers--he afterwards decides to visit his birth mom to let her know
he turned out
just fine, only he's again rejected. With that Steven comes clean and lets
everyone know he's
gay. This means quitting the force and divorcing
Debbie. The next move
has Steven as a con man living with the hunky Jimmy (Rodrigo Santoro) in South Beach. Steven's
credit-card and
insurance scam catches up with him and he serves
prison time in Texas,
meanwhile Jimmy dies of AIDS. In prison the energetic
smoothy con man
meets the shy, gentle and weepy Southern
gentleman Phillip Morris (),
and they slow dance in their cell to Johnny Mathis'
"Chances Are" and
become lovers with Steven aggressively becoming his
protector and
provider. Through manipulating the system (Steven
posing as a lawyer)
Steven and Phillip are freed, and live together on the
outside. By
falsifying his resume, Steven is hired by Lindholm (Antoni
Corone) to be
the chief
financial officer at his medical
management company. Steven scams the company for a
fortune, and claims
to be a hopeless romantic doing it so his lover can
live a high
maintenance lifestyle in lavender luxury. Eventually
Steven's
tripped-up and sent again to a Texas prison. Warning: spoiler in next paragraph. We now catch up to the
opening scene of Steven in a hospital bed, if you can
believe, faking
AIDS. Steven's daring plan works and he escapes, but
is caught and gets
a life sentence with no parole (we're told the
sentence was so stiff
because Steven made fools out of the jailers and the
prison system, and
deeply embarrassed Governor Bush). You couldn't make this
story
up, as the truth proves to be stranger than fiction.
Problem is the
movie never made Steven's criminal spree
in fraud, deception, impersonations and prison escape
seem believable
(the deeper we get into the crime spree, the less
believable it
becomes) or was there any real chemistry between the
big stars as
lovers (it only seemed like play acting) or did its
pro-con man story
have much of an emotional impact with the viewer (it
was hard to see
what was so likable about such an untrustworthy
two-faced character).
It was filmed as a comedy and gave Carrey a chance to
do all his usual
physical comedy routines, but the broad comedy missed
the mark more
often than it hit to attract either the arthouse crowd
or Carrey's
usual mall viewers. But it's a Carrey pic alright,
just a hard one to
label. In any case, this
lighthearted film about a master escape artist and
impostor and a
non-violent but ambitious sociopath, promotes a homosexual
agenda with no
patronizing from straights and shows us that Hollywood
can at least
after Brokeback Mountain attempt to make a film
showing a gay person
indulging openly in lusty sex--the problem is can they
make a good film
on this subject matter and get an audience for it.
They had the right
star in Carrey, but blew it by having a flawed script
and uneven
direction (we never knew if we were supposed to laugh
or cry). It premiered at Sundance in 2009, but was not released for over a year because the frightened studio heads were thinking there was no great audience for such a lurid gay film. REVIEWED ON 3/14/2011 GRADE: C+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |