|
WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Leatherheads: A failed comedy, and a talent at war
with itself
By Matt Waller
6 May 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Directed by George Clooney, written by Duncan Brantley and
Rick Reilly
In Leatherheads, his third directorial assignment, George
Clooney makes an effort to shelve the serious themes for which
he has recently gained recognition and instead attempts a light-hearted
comedy-romance about the early days of American professional football.
The result is very poor: a movie that manages to be awful in several
ways at once, not the least insignificant of which is the spectacle
of Clooney bending over backward to be harmless.
Its especially disappointing, because as a director Clooney
was so sharp in Good Night, and Good Luck, and as an actor
he demonstrated excellent comic timing in the Coen Brothers
O Brother, Where Art Thou? Here he directs himself in a
comedy, and it falls flat.
Part of the difficulty may lie in the very act of directing
himself. Clooney plays Dodge Connelly, a charmer, promoter and
captain of a struggling pro football team in 1925, when the sport
was informal to the point of practicing in cow fields. The actor-director
is on-screen for most of the movie, looking soulfully at the camera
or tilting his chin in the late-afternoon light, and the script
has Dodge relentlessly charming everyone and succeeding at everything.

There can be something a little narcissistic about a director
helming a star vehicle for himselfe.g., Robert Redfords
self-aggrandizing The Horse Whisperer. That depends of
course on the film and the filmmaker. Orson Welles managed to
direct himself, as did Charlie Chaplin.
But the central problem with Leatherheads is that Clooney
gets hopelessly lost in both the story hes telling and the
style with which hes trying to tell it.
The plot concerns Dodges effort to revive his bankrupt
team by luring college star Carter Rutherford (John Krasinski)
out of school to be his new quarterback. Carter, a World War I
hero, is being trailed by Lexie Littleton (Renée Zellweger),
a hard-edged yet vixenish reporter secretly out to debunk the
claims of his battlefield exploits. Naturally, Dodge falls for
Lexie, and he and Carter become rivals for her affection.
The film then cant decide which strand of the story to
follow: the romance between Dodge and Lexie; the sports drama
of the struggling team with its panoply of eccentric characters;
the tension over Lexies secret mission and Carters
mysterious past; or the birth of modern footballs backroom
politics. All these elements get thrown together and interfere
with one another, so that the romance is perfunctory, the sports
story is undramatic (a climactic game scene drags on excruciatingly),
and the theme involving rules that killed the game
feels tacked on.
Stylistically, Clooney stages a self-conscious revival of the
screwball comedy, à la Bringing Up Baby, complete
with rapid-fire dialogue and slapstick chase scenes. Some of the
banter between Dodge and Lexie is successful, witty and invigorating,
and offers a bright spot. A major problem, however, is that the
premise is not inherently funny. A story of underhanded journalism
and big-money sports promotion could easily be treated dramatically,
and there are several moments where it wants to be. At least twice
in the film, fist-fights break out that feel like they could be
serious, and it takes the intervention of Randy Newmans
score to assure the audience that its all in good fun.
The screwball style, then, serves not to enhance, but defuse
the emotions of the story being told. Clooney the director seems
to be struggling to keep his own material tamped down to the level
of a Saturday morning cartoon, continually insisting that nothing
here is of consequence.
Thematically, one can feel the same tamping-down process at
work. Accidentally, as it were, Leatherheads brings up
several important and potentially interesting issues, only to
drop each like a hot potato. Carters war hero
story turns out to be largely a creation of media hype (echoing
the Jessica Lynch affair at the beginning of the Iraq War). When
Clooney says, America needs its heroes, it looks like
an interesting parallel is being drawn between war heroes and
sports celebrities at the dawn of the age of propaganda. We even
get a suggestive scene where the new football commissioner seems
to be making an effort to suppress Lexies truth-telling.
In the end, however, that promising story line is also undermined.
Likewise, in this movie, we glimpse major newspapers resorting
to tabloid journalism and deep-pocketed sports agents manipulating
the game behind the scenes. Indeed, for a nostalgia piece about
a vanished America, Leatherheads paints a surprisingly
downbeat picture of a country in thrall to economic hardship and
corrupt business powers. Nevertheless, the cartoon style comes
to the rescue, trivializing the issues and quickly shoving them
off-screen.
Shot-by-shot, Clooney remains a skilled director, and bits
of the movie work effectively, especially the sentimental passages
about the old-fashioned game. But the overall effect is of a film
at war with itself, and in a recent interview, Clooney provided
some clue as to how he came to direct it:
Right after Good Night, and Good Luck and
Syriana...everything that was coming to me was issues
films. They were happy to let me direct, but it was the Richard
Clarke book. It was We are going to do the big Valerie Plame
story. It was going to be something political and I had
a great fear of being the issues director, because
the issues change and I have a much bigger interest in being a
director. So, I wanted to do something that was completely away
from this.
What emerges in Leatherheads, painfully, is an issues
director raising provocative issues and trying his best
to bury them in nonsense at the same timewith the added
misfortune that the nonsense is his own face.
Whether the movie will open doors for Clooney in Hollywood
is questionable. Were any really closed? It will not help his
reputation for artistic integrity and seriousness.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |