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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=89TT3312>
<title>
Dec. 18, 1989: Of Time And The River
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Dec. 18, 1989 Money Laundering
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CINEMA, Page 91
Of Time and the River
</hdr><body>
<p>Coming to terms with bravery and tomfoolery
</p>
<qt> <l>DRIVING MISS DAISY</l>
<l>Directed by Bruce Beresford</l>
<l>Screenplay by Alfred Uhry</l>
</qt>
<p> It is the season when movies are ablaze with
self-importance, urging us to contemplate, through various
fictive metaphors, the great issues of our time. And, by the
way, to spare some kindly thoughts for the high-mindedness of
their makers and their worthiness for Oscar nominations.
</p>
<p> Such a metaphor is available in Driving Miss Daisy. If you
look hard, you can find in this account of the 25-year
relationship between Daisy Werthan (Jessica Tandy), a genteel
Southern, Jewish matriarch, and her black chauffeur, Hoke
Colburn (Morgan Freeman), a microcosmic study of changing racial
attitudes in a crucial time and place (Atlanta, circa 1948-73).
What you will not find in this marvelously understated movie is
overtly inspirational comments on that subject, broad
sentimentality or the slightest pomposity about its own mission.
In other words, Alfred Uhry's adaptation of his
Pulitzer-prizewinning play aspires more to complex observation
of human behavior than to simple moralism about it. Precisely
because it has its priorities straight, it succeeds superbly on
both levels.
</p>
<p> Director Bruce Beresford's tone is cool and shadowy -- like
Miss Daisy's fine old house. Hoke is introduced into it by her
son Boolie (Dan Aykroyd, displaying full credentials as an
actor), when at 72 Miss Daisy careers her car into a neighbor's
yard. She has objections, suspicions. She harbors -- yes -- more
racial prejudice than she has ever been forced to admit.
</p>
<p> But Hoke is a wise and patient man. And Miss Daisy is a
woman worthy of those qualities. She may be comically set in her
small ways, but she casts a shrewd eye on her immediate world.
As she ages, that world shrinks, so that Hoke looms ever larger
within it. As a result, she is forced to think harder about the
growing civil rights struggle than she might otherwise have. An
encounter with menacing red-neck cops on a country road, the
bombing of her synagogue, a distant but moving exposure to the
force of Martin Luther King Jr.'s oratory all have their effect
on her. But mostly it is the simple presence of a good man that
grants her age's greatest benison, expanding rather than
shrinking her humanity.
</p>
<p> One cannot speak too highly of the subtlety that two great
actors, Freeman and Tandy, bring to their roles. Or of the
faith that Beresford places in their ability to convey large
emotions through an exchange of glances in a rearview mirror.
Or of his trust in a script that speaks most eloquently through
silences and indirection. All, finally, have placed their faith
in the audience's ability to read their delicately stated work
with the responsiveness it deserves. It would be a shame to fail
them.
</p>
<qt> <l>GLORY</l>
<l>Directed by Edward Zwick</l>
<l>Screenplay by Kevin Jarre</l>
</qt>
<p> It just slips under the wire as the first large-scale Civil
War film of the decade. And it may be the last of the
millennium, so far out of favor (and economic viability) have
historical epics of all kinds fallen. Maybe one's good response
to Glory derives from the sheer novelty of the thing and from
admiration for the producers' gumption in flinging it in the
face of the movie audience's indifference to the pretelevised
past.
</p>
<p> But not entirely. For the specific historical events the
film narrates -- the formation, training and terrible blooding
in battle of the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, the first black
fighting unit enlisted in the Union cause -- are little known
yet resonant with high symbolic significance. The 54th, led by
an idealistic 25-year-old white man, Colonel Robert Gould Shaw
(Matthew Broderick skillfully blending shyness and tenacity),
had to fight to fight. Their white comrades-in-arms were full
of contemptuous prejudice against them, and the high command was
afraid to arm black men who had their own bitter racial
grievances (many were runaway slaves).
</p>
<p> Yet precisely because of their lowly status, these men had
a more than usually powerful need to assert their manhood
through deadly exertion. Glory is at its best when it shows
their proud embrace of 19th century warfare at its most brutal.
Director Edward Zwick graphically demonstrates the absurdity of
lines of soldiers slowly advancing across open ground, shoulder
to shoulder, in the face of withering rifle volleys and
horrendous cannonade. The fact that the 54th finally achieves
respect (and opens the way for other black soldiers) only by
losing half its number in a foredoomed assault on an impregnable
fortress underscores this terrible and brutal irony.
</p>
<p> Kevin Jarre's script makes no direct comment on these
matters, and a squad of fine actors ground the film in felt
reality: Denzel Washington is a proud and badly misused
troublemaker; Driving Miss Daisy's Morgan Freeman a steadying
influence; Andre Braugher a Harvard student who finds Emersonian
idealism of small help in mastering the bayonet. It is the
movie's often awesome imagery and a bravely soaring choral score
by James Horner that transfigure the reality, granting it the
status of necessary myth. Broad, bold, blunt, Glory is
everything that a film like Miss Daisy, all nuance and
implication, is not. But arriving together, they somehow
hearten: they widen the range of our responses to what remains
the central issue of our past, our present, our future.
</p>
<qt> <l>BLAZE</l>
<l>Directed and Written by Ron Shelton</l>
</qt>
<p> It was an affair made in tabloid heaven: stripteaser Blaze
Starr ("Miss Spontaneous Combustion, and I do mean bustion!")
and Earl K. Long, fine Governor of the great state of Louisiana.
Long was too full of his princely power to be discreet about
his indiscretions. Blaze could have told him -- and in this
lengthy, clever, depressing film she does -- that "your
political instincts are clouded by the aroma of my perfume."
By 1959, when Long's campaign slogan was the forthright "I ain't
crazy," his liaison with the stripper was as controversial as
his tax evasion and support for Negro voting rights. He lost.
It was a little American tragedy, played as farce.
</p>
<p> Ron Shelton (Bull Durham) directs Blaze with plenty of
pungent wit, but from a high, disinterested view. He never gets
steam into the affair. Paul Newman approaches Earl from the
outside too, as a growly-bear clown who doesn't realize he's
King Lear. Lolita Davidovich, making the most of her first big
break, plays Blaze as a sensible, loving career gal with an
overripe body. But the picture is not mainly about sex or even
love; it is about an aging man's loss of sexual, political and
personal power.
</p>
<p> The film ends with a great shot. Blaze walks out of the
state house where Earl's corpse lies, and the camera ascends to
take in Long's old domain. Randy Newman's poignant song
Louisiana 1927 -- a cracker's lament about a devastating flood
-- reaches its apogee of symphonic paranoia with the line
"They're tryin' to wash us away." Just then, the camera
discovers the Mississippi roaring past, washing away Earl and
his wily, wild, pre-TV tradition of Southern politics. What has
happened down there is that the wind has changed, and for its
last three minutes Blaze finds potent film poetry to express
that change. The rest of the movie lacks Earl's heroic
craziness. And the stars could use a dose of Blaze's spontaneous
combustion.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>