|
|
|
IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| KING OF COMEDY, THE (director: Martin Scorsese; screenwriter: Paul D. Zimmerman; cinematographer: Fred Schuler; editor: Thelma Schoonmaker; music: Robbie Robertson; cast: Robert De Niro (Rupert Pupkin), Jerry Lewis (Jerry Langford), Diahnne Abbott (Rita), Sandra Bernhard (Masha), Shelley Hack (Cathy Long), Tony Randall (Himself), Fred de Cordova (Producer), Catherine Scorsese (Rupert's unseen mom); Runtime: 109; MPAA Rating: PG; producer: Arnon Milchan; Fox Home Video; 1982) |
| "Creepy,
frighteningly funny and brilliant as cultural
satire."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Director Martin Scorsese's ("Kundun"/"Mean
Streets"/"Taxi Driver")
edgy black comedy on showbiz fringe people, groupies,
autograph hunters
and those obsessively caught up in celebrity
fervor. It's
pungently written by Paul
D. Zimmerman, who keeps it creepy, frighteningly
funny and brilliant as
cultural satire. It also pays homage to Jerry Lewis,
who costars and
shuns his infantile nerdy shtick to play a demanding
grown-up role in a
subdued manner as a star comedian under duress from
his out-of-control
manic fans. Jerry plays the role of Jerry Langford, a Johnny
Carson-like late night TV host who is very popular and
after each show
before reaching his limo must pass by a throng of
enthusiastic fans
waiting to catch a glimpse of him or to hound him for
an autograph. One
of those at the studio door every
evening is aspiring comedian Rupert Pupkin (Robert De
Niro), a pushy
motor-mouth 34-year-old messenger in Manhattan, who
lives in his
parents' home in Clifton, N.J., and in the basement
has set-up an
imitation set from Jerry's Late Show to practice his
stand-up comedy
routines. Rupert's dream is to appear on Jerry's show,
and he's now
ready for his big break. One evening, fellow
groupie
Masha (Sandra
Bernhard)
forces her way into Jerry's limo and is
removed after trying to kiss him. Rupert clears the
crowd from the limo
and pushes his way into Jerry's limo and won't leave
until he gets
Jerry to promise him an audition. After numerous
attempts to reach
Jerry at the studio fail and then being bounced from
the studio after
he sneaks in, Rupert gets tossed again after dragging
the girl he had a
crush on in high school, Rita (Diahnne
Abbott), now a
barmaid he just
met again, for an unscheduled visit to Jerry's posh
suburban home.
Rupert is willing to do anything to be a comedian, and
arranges with
fellow loony groupie Masha to kidnap Jerry and force
his people to put
Rupert on the show billed as "The King of Comedy." This is Taxi Driver
without
the cab or the Viet Nam War angst, but with the same
oddball type of
anti-social character willing to do anything (even if
criminal) to make
his dream come true. The repulsive character De Niro
plays is
driven by a quiet rage that will allow no
one to stop him from making his dream come true, even
if his journey
takes him on a ride on the dark side. De Niro and Lewis give masterful performances, while improv commedienne Bernhard is right at home with the bizarre storyline that is filled with unsettling moments. REVIEWED ON 5/25/2010 GRADE: A- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |