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- CINEMA, Page 82Postscript to the '80sBy Richard Schickel
-
-
- CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS
- Directed and Written by Woody Allen
-
- Judah Rosenthal (Martin Landau) is possessed by a primal
- memory: a rabbi instructing the boy Judah that the eye of God is
- all seeing; no crime ever escapes it. Now successful and middle
- aged, Judah self-deprecatingly suggests to the audience at a
- testimonial dinner on his behalf that perhaps he became an
- ophthalmologist because he is haunted by that recollection.
-
- Seeing is also a subject that Cliff Stern (Woody Allen) takes
- seriously. A documentary filmmaker, he is driven not by God but by
- the demands of an unyielding conscience to make his camera -- his
- eye -- bear witness to the inequities of his careless time.
-
- Cliff's only connection to Judah -- until the concluding
- sequence of this thematically unified but somewhat bifurcated movie
- -- is through Ben, another rabbi (Sam Waterston), who is one of
- Cliff's brothers-in-law. The rabbi is Judah's patient, and his eye
- trouble is quite literal; by the end of the movie he has gone
- blind. But this blindness is also symbolic. By visiting this
- affliction on the only character in his movie who has remained
- close to God, Allen is suggesting that if the Deity himself is not
- dead, then he must be suffering from severely impaired vision.
-
- All the crimes and misdemeanors Allen records in this film go
- not merely unpunished; they are generously rewarded. Upstairs, on
- the melodramatic story line, a hypocritical Judah gets away with
- murder, arranging for the assassination of his mistress (Anjelica
- Huston), who threatens to make their affair -- and his equally
- shabby financial affairs -- public, thereby destroying his family,
- wealth and reputation.
-
- Downstairs, on the funny line, is Cliff's other brother-in-law
- Lester, a sleek TV producer (played by Alan Alda in a gloriously
- fashioned comic performance). He offers Cliff a sinecure: filming
- a documentary that will make Lester look like a philosopher-king
- among the pompous nitwits who produce prime-time TV. Cliff agrees,
- but because he tries to turn Lester's story into a truthful expose,
- the project collapses. Along the way he loses the woman he loves
- (Mia Farrow), as well as a serious film to which he had been
- profoundly committed.
-
- This is the funny stuff? Yes, because Allen puts a deliberately
- farcical spin on Cliff's frenzies. It is good showmanship, a way
- of relieving the itchy ironies of Judah's discomfiting story. It
- also rings with irony. If neither Judah's guilty musings on his own
- crimes -- and he does exhibit a strong desire to be caught and
- punished -- nor decent Cliff's frantic quest for some kind of
- fulfillment can awaken heaven's sleeping eye, then what in this
- world can? If Manhattan, coming at the end of the '70s, was Woody
- Allen's comment on that decade's besetting sin, self-absorption,
- then this is his concluding unscientific postscript on the
- besetting sin of the '80s, greed. At times the joints in the
- movie's carpentry are strained, at times the mood swings jarring.
- But they stir us from our comfortable stupor and vivify a true,
- moral, always acute and often hilarious meditation on the
- psychological economy of the Reagan years.