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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT0319>
<title>
Oct. 04, 1993: The Heart Of American Darkness
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CINEMA, Page 80
The Heart Of American Darkness
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Robert Altman's panoramic Short Cuts is a richly pulsating human
comedy
</p>
<p>By RICHARD SCHICKEL--With reporting by Jeffrey Ressner/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> Robert Altman's Short Cuts--one of the season's most widely
anticipated films--opens with shots of helicopters, photographed
so they look like giant bugs as they roar across the night skies,
doing battle with a little bug, the Medfly, terror of the California
fruit industry. This periodic chemical warfare, in which insecticides
are noisily laid down across entire neighborhoods, is one of
the minor, faintly comic annoyances of Los Angeles life. All
that technology; such a humble and primitive foe.
</p>
<p> The film ends with an earthquake rumbling across L.A. Such periodic
seismic uproars are, of course, something more than an annoyance.
There's nothing funny about them and no technology to fight
them. They are nature's blunt reminder that life in L.A. is
transitory, that the very ground under one's feet is not to
be trusted.
</p>
<p> The temblor shakes the lives of everyone still alive at the
conclusion of the movie. But not more so than the events they
have endured prior to it. Among the characters: the grieving
parents of a little boy who dies mysteriously after a hit-and-run
accident from which he calmly walked away; a group of fishermen
who steadfastly pursue their sport despite a dead body floating
in their favorite fishing hole; a woman who runs a telephone
sex service while tending her children and sexually ignoring
her husband (ultimately with terrible results); a wide variety
of men and women who are cheating or have cheated on their spouses.
These people mostly have bad jobs or no jobs. Some drink too
much. Some are lonely. Some are depressed or angry. But all
are "normal" in the faces they present to the world.
</p>
<p> Everything about Short Cuts, which runs 3 hr. 9 min., recounts
no less than eight stories and deploys 24 major actors, signals
large aspiration and a desire to present a panoramic vision
of life in what everyone is now pleased to think of as the heart
of American darkness. Los Angeles, the city that has in a wink
of history's eye ceased to be Everyman's Great Utopia, has become
instead everyone's Great Dystopia.
</p>
<p> Whether the film, which has the prestigious opening-night slot
at the New York Film Festival this Friday, achieves its highest
aims is likely to prove hotly debatable as it rolls slowly into
theaters during the fall. L.A. is, after all, the world's easiest
satirical target. Moreover, Altman and co-screenwriter Frank
Barhydt are adapting--freely commingling is a better description--short stories by the late Raymond Carver. These have quite
a different bleakness about them and are, anyway, resistant
to the implicit cultural generalizations the movie tries to
impose on them. Carver was content to capture discrete moments
of confusion and loss in everyday, mostly lower-middle-class
lives, rendered in spare, sparsely populated stories. His manner
rigorously excluded direct emotional comment on the behavior
of his people. Or, for that matter, ironic observations about
it.
</p>
<p> Altman, in contrast, is an exuberant inclusionist. His best
and most characteristic films (MASH, Nashville, The Player)
teem with characters bouncing from one level to another of multilayered
stories that are full of chance encounters and crazy coincidences.
"There's something about this mural-type film that interests
me," he says simply. It was--what else?--chance that brought
Altman to Carver. He asked his secretary for reading matter
for a transatlantic flight, and she provided several collections
of Carver's stories. Dipping in and out of them as he dropped
in and out of sleep, Altman found that by the end of the flight
they had all homogenized. "I really couldn't remember one from
the other," he says. But he did realize, "My God, this is a
movie." Specifically, an Altman movie.
</p>
<p> Maybe Altman gives Carver's people more interesting or eccentric
jobs than they originally had; maybe he condescends to them
occasionally; maybe one story that is his own and Barhydt's
invention is melodramatically overweening. Nevertheless, this
movie works. In part, that's because Altman and Carver do share
one important characteristic: short attention spans. They like
to touch a moment and move quickly on. True to his title, Altman
does not linger on any of his stories. Nobody is ever on long
enough to grow tedious, and his linkages between stories (the
screenwriters used color-coded file cards pinned to a bulletin
board to keep them straight) are wonderfully inventive and set
up very curious resonances. "I kind of wish it were shorter,"
says Altman, "but this is what it is. It's like having a kid
who's seven feet tall. What do you do? You buy him a new bed
and hope he can play basketball."
</p>
<p> If Altman's impatience with conventional narrative animates
his film, so does his patience with and trust of actors. He's
always been a man who encourages his performers to riff on a
script's themes, and they respond with astonishing brio. "This
movie was like a symphony, with Bob serving as the conductor,"
says one of his featured players, Matthew Modine. "It created
a tremendous amount of pressure because you have to understand
where you're at, when you come in, and what your role is. It's
like a musician standing in front of these two big timpani drums.
All he may have to do is hit them two times, but there's a tremendous
potential for missing his cue and throwing everything off."
Says Altman: "These parts aren't found in everyday movies. Here,
suddenly, the actors can really create a character and play
the moment, without worrying that they have to murder someone
in the third act."
</p>
<p> It may be unfair to single anyone out of this extraordinary
cast, but the lunatic self-assurance of Tim Robbins as a motorcycle
cop stealing his own children's dog (he hates the mutt), conducting
an affair and covering his absences with tall tales of undercover
drug investigations is hatefully hilarious. His braying boldness
represents one emotional extreme in the picture. The other (the
one that touches the most lives, and whose story is structurally
the center of the film) is played, with great delicacy, by Andie
MacDowell and Bruce Davison as the couple trying to cope with
their child's hit-and-run accident.
</p>
<p> Between these poles, Jack Lemmon contributes a self-justifying
monologue about a long-ago but devastating marital infidelity
that is haunting in its self-delusions. Jennifer Jason Leigh
as the mom with a sideline in dirty talk and Anne Archer as
a woman whose part-time job is clowning for school kids superbly
represent lower-middle-class economic desperation. And then
there's Julianne Moore, whose doctor-husband (Modine) obsessively
pesters her about a one-night stand she may or may not have
had years ago. When she finally makes her long confession, she
is half-naked--a brave actor's choice, signaling not eroticism
but vulnerability.
</p>
<p> That quality is Short Cuts' great redeeming grace. But it is
Altman's refusal to linger on it sentimentally, his joyous appreciation
of his actors' wicked inventiveness, and everyone's passionate,
quick-witted desire to expose the vagaries of human behavior
under quotidian pressure that simply sweep you up and sweep
away whatever doubts you may have about its grand design. It
is, finally, as a richly pulsating, hugely entertaining human
comedy--antic, wayward, glancing--that Short Cuts bemuses,
amuses and finally entrances us.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>