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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=91TT2108>
<title>
Sep. 23, 1991: Words of One Syllabus
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Sep. 23, 1991 Lost Tribes, Lost Knowledge
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CINEMA, Page 68
Words of One Syllabus
</hdr><body>
<p>By Richard Corliss
</p>
<qt>
<l>THE FISHER KING</l>
<l>Directed by Terry Gilliam</l>
<l>Screenplay by Richard LaGravenese</l>
</qt>
<p> The school year has just started, and already we're
getting tired of the lessons movies have to teach. For most of
the summer, a season that should provide a vacation from the
heavy hand of pedagogy, moviegoers have been pummeled with
do-gooder didacticism. Calves are good (City Slickers). So are
dogs (101 Dalmatians). Men, of course, are baaad (Terminator 2,
Thelma & Louise), unless they are ghetto fathers (Boyz N the
Hood), in which case women are bad. Physicians need remedial
courses in niceness (The Doctor, Doc Hollywood). And lawyers,
should they care to join the human race, need a shot in the head
(Regarding Henry). Some summer! Whether the star was Arnold
Schwarzenegger or Harrison Ford, you couldn't tell the players
without a report card.
</p>
<p> So here comes the fall's first big movie, and now we're in
World Literature 101. Cart out all those Holy Grail legends
stored in the attic of your memory and apply them to a
four-handed love story. But the true lesson is more familiar:
psychotic people are holy seers, tour guides into the nine
circles of the urban soul.
</p>
<p> When he finds his guide, Jack Lucas (Jeff Bridges) is in
a self-made hell. A New York City talk-show host, Jack told a
caller he was among "the bungled and the botched," and the
caller promptly gunned down seven people at a yuppie boite.
Three years later, a wasted husk in the care of a video-store
owner (the ingratiating Mercedes Ruehl), Jack meets the husband
of one of those victims, now a daft street creature called Parry
(Robin Williams), who leads his fellow homeless in singing "I
like New York in June./ How about you?" Parry believes that Jack
is a modern Fisher King, a '90s knight searching for the grail
of emotional redemption, and Parry knows where it is: in a
billionaire's mansion. Parry also has a quest: to win the troth
of a frayed damsel (Amanda Plummer, again doing her
prom-queen-from-Mars number).
</p>
<p> This is all catnip to Terry Gilliam, deviser of the Monty
Python animations and co-director of Monty Python and the Holy
Grail. On his own he directed one commercial hit (Time Bandits)
and one cult smash (Brazil). Critics, this one included, went
crazy for Brazil; but not many citizens felt at home amid all
the astringent whimsy. And the director's next phantasmagoria,
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, was a $50 million flop.
</p>
<p> Like all these, The Fisher King is long, dark and handsome--disorienting comedy in a Boschian fun house. Some big
emotional moments are bungled or botched. The narrative
scaffolding, all that Grail gathering, is both too elaborate and
too gossamer to support what is at heart a buddy movie. And the
film's moral is bizarre: for two guys to achieve sanity and
humanity, they should get naked together some night in Central
Park. What if movie goers take this advice to heart? They could
get a stern lesson, and it wouldn't be applied with a ruler.
</p>
<p> But inside the lecture there are pleasures galore: the
subplot of Williams and Plummer, sweet losers in love; the
delirious intensity of all four stars, as if they were in a
psychodrama and not a fairy tale; a terrific turn by Michael
Jeter as a deranged chorus boy belting out tunes from Gypsy; a
waltz cotillion of a couple hundred commuters at Grand Central
Terminal. All this attests to Gilliam's filmmaking glamour,
which gives heft to the tale and invests Manhattan with a
malefic majesty. A million reservations notwithstanding, I like
The Fisher King. How about you?
</p>
</body></article>
</text>