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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-26
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<text id=91TT2168>
<title>
Sep. 30, 1991: Side Trips into Daydream
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Sep. 30, 1991 Curing Infertility
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CINEMA, Page 81
Side Trips into Daydream
</hdr><body>
<p>Two films of stage shows by Lily Tomlin and Eric Bogosian provide
peeks into funny, beautiful and diseased minds
</p>
<p>By Richard Corliss
</p>
<p> We all live monologues. These conversations with ourselves
are the endless, anarchic commentary running in our brains.
They contain--just barely--our rage and desperation. They are
the rough drafts of spoken discourse, the side trips into
daydream irrelevancies, the lusts and prejudices left unsaid but
so deeply felt. Ultimately, our interior monologues amount to a
lifelong novel in progress, or perhaps the world's windiest
suicide note. Transcribed, they could tell more about what we are
than everything we do.
</p>
<p> They don't get into films much; mainstream movies are
mostly fists and kisses. But when a monologue works--directly,
unmediated by elaborate sets and scripts, with one gifted person
on a stage--it can work big. Richard Pryor proved that with
his first two concert films. He scalded all civilized
pretensions off his persona and helped audiences laugh and gasp
at the exposed wound. Eddie Murphy, Bill Cosby and Andrew Dice
Clay also did monologue movies, but they lacked Pryor's
life-or-death juice; they were mainly marketing tie-ins to the
comics' celebrity.
</p>
<p> Now two wondrous monologists, Lily Tomlin and Eric
Bogosian, offer movie-goers a peek into beautiful and diseased
minds. The films, based on stage plays, are a bit more careful,
more artful, than Pryor's but just as worthy. And just as funny.
</p>
<p> Onstage, Tomlin's The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life
in the Universe, written by Jane Wagner, was a solo dazzle and a
terrific human comedy. Through its dozen or so characters, it
provided a panoramic 20-year history of American womanhood. The
heart of the piece is Lyn, earnest careerist-wife-mom,
exhausted by achieving feminism's goals: "We can have it all.
We already have it all. We just got it all at once." And the
narrator is Trudy, bag-lady philosopher: "My mind didn't snap;
it was tryin' to stretch itself into a new shape."
</p>
<p> In stretching the play to film size, a few things snap.
The communal intimacy of live theater, for one; at first the
piece sounds more like a rant from across the street than like
the compassionate campfire chat it was. But as Search for Signs
reaches its climax, artist and author stride over these
nettles. If this isn't a goose-bump experience for you, you're
just not sentient.
</p>
<p> Bogosian's Sex Drugs Rock & Roll, handsomely filmed by
John McNaughton, is a 10-pack of modular monologues. The
subjects don't interact with one another; they shout at
invisible targets. But it's soon manifest that in their common
rancor, they constitute a lost tribe of American masculinity.
The street stud, the down-home Don Juan, the vicious
entertainment lawyer, a couple or three psychopaths--all plan
their killer strategies and lullaby themselves with fantasies
of apocalypse and revenge. Bogosian rarely sentimentalizes his
creatures or provides the familiar monologue arc of comedy,
poignancy, comedy. As writer he creates and stands back; as
actor he inhabits while he satirizes. He implicates himself.
</p>
<p> The two films display the best acting in current movies--volcanic emotions, precisely explored. But their great gift is
to tell you what folks think when no one is listening. "If they
ever knew what I was thinkin', man," says one of Bogosian's
drugged-out misanthropes, "I'd be dead." But these movies know
that the mysterious mind is where we all live. With acute
daring, Tomlin and Bogosian say, These people are not other
people. They're us, inside.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>