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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
The curse of the self-involved Manhattanite
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion, written and directed
by Woody Allen
By Joanne Laurier
30 August 2001
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Woody Allens The Curse of the Jade Scorpion, a
film noir crime caper set in 1940s Manhattan, is a film
of few merits, despite the striking cinematography of Zhao Fei
and remarkable period reconstruction of production designer Santo
Loquato.
C.W. Briggs (Allen) is an investigator for a troubled insurance
firm that has engaged efficiency expert Betty Ann Fitzgerald (Helen
Hunt) to modernize the company. The firm is full of veteran investigators
who solve cases in their own way, foremost among them being the
womanizing C.W., who relies on intuition and a network of well-paid
and well-treated snitches. Fitzgerald or Fitz has little tolerance
for C.W. and is hell-bent on outsourcing the detective department.
Fitz, who is secretly having an affair with the married company
owner (Dan Aykroyd), is not only apparently immune to but repulsed
by C.W.s old-style charms.
At an office birthday party at the famed Rainbow Room, Fitz
and C.W. are put under a spell by a professional hypnotist, Voltan
Polgar, (David Ogden Stiers). For the audiences amusement
Voltan has the couple fall in love. He also, however, surreptitiously
programs them to respond to a command word, which will be later
used in post-hypnotic suggestion to turn C.W. (and later Fitz)
into unwitting jewel thieves.
At each crime scene the clues incriminate C.W., who had designed
the elaborate security systems at the various estates. C.W. is
jailed, only to be freed by femme fatale Laura Kensington
(Charlize Theron), whose family was one of those burglarized.
Kensington has repeatedly thrown herself at C.W. Fitz, the no-nonsense
career woman, who is a soft touch for bad love affairs
(she nearly commits suicide over the Aykroyd character), begins
to see C.W.s deeper side. The uncovering of
the mechanism for the robberies is an almost non-event and the
movie rushes forward to unite the arch-antagonists in a predictable
fashion.
With the exception of a few amusing lines and a few actors
who are enjoyable to watch, the movie is bland as a whole, with
little comic timing or momentum. The entire film hinges on Allens
performance as the gumshoe with the snappy patter, who unbelievably
(at age 65!) wows all the young beauties. With the exception of
Allen and Hunt, most of the characters, including Theron, Aykroyd
and most disappointingly Wallace Shawn, have virtually nothing
to do. Hunt is always straining and overexerting to bring to life
a stillborn moment or to make natural a self-conscious line.
Allens script is generally amateurish and devoid of much
life or feeling. On the most obvious comedic level, the plot could
have been embellished with twists that organically arise from
some potentially funny situations. The robbery scenes, some of
the most carelessly crafted, cried out for a comic (or suspenseful)
elaboration. Opportunities for comedy were missed from beginning
to end. From the point of view of the acting talent utilized,
the stunning cinematography, the aesthetically rich production
efforts, as well as Allens excellent jazz selections, the
project seems incredibly wasteful.
Allens lazy, thoughtless approach to the creation of
the light-comedy, a highly taxing genre, is highlighted in a comment
from the films production notes: Ive never been
hypnotized, and there was no specific reason to do it; it was
just a funny premise, and the rest is whatever spun out from that.
One reviewer interprets these remarks to signify that Allen
now makes pictures out of habit, rather than desire or ambition,
and the results often feel more like rough drafts than finished
products.... There used to be considerable focus and magnetism
to Allens comic perceptions, a unique, overriding sense
of purpose.
How is one to explain such flabbiness, amateurishness and lack
of purpose from someone like Allen? It is painful to watch him
as the romantic lead doing his timeworn routine. It reveals an
artist who is embarrassingly out of touch with his audience and
himself. There is apparently no one in Allens coterie who
will point out to him that his nervous schlemiel is by now tired
and threadbare and that he is no longer writing many funny lines.
Although none of Allens films have been fully formed artistically,
he is capable of wit and insight, self-criticism and social criticism.
Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989) was one of the most important
Reagan-era films. Husbands and Wives (1992) included excellent
performances and delivered some hard blows to the Manhattan semi-liberal,
semi-intellectual middle class. Celebrity (1998) was a
biting Hollywood industry satire that created some waves.
Allen has always had a tendency to be soft on himself and,
more importantly, to avoid the more troubling aspects of life
and history. Great pains were taken in The Curse of the Jade
Scorpion to recreate costumes and locations. Not so with the
characters who are irritatingly modern or merely caricatures of
movie types.
The level of egocentric obliviousness reflected in the film
is not primarily an individual issue, although Allens well-publicized
personal difficulties seemed to suggest a particularly self-involved
and childish personality. The degree of artistic and social insularity
the writer-director exhibits in this film says something about
the evolution of the well-heeled Manhattan milieu with which the
vast majority of his films have been preoccupied. Many of these
people are now mesmerized by their own wealth and stature. Why
should they listen to advice or criticism, much less examine the
social contrasts or pay attention to signs of impending crisis?
Allen has absorbed some of this. With The Curse of the
Jade Scorpion, he now finds himself in a self-hypnotic trance
unmindful of a world that demands much more of an artist of his
caliber.
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