Interesting to me
at least because the idea had never occurred to me before and new ideas are
always illuminating, and therefore interesting.
At least to some of us.
I liked Trainwreck more
than I thought I would, as a result primarily of Amy Schumer’s unexpected
vulnerability (underlined by the self-professed “Party Girl’s” sartorial
modesty in the boudoir.)
There was also one explosively funny interlude, during which
the film’s male lead Bill Hader engaged in a serious “One-on-One” confrontation
on the basketball floor with the current greatest player in the game, Lebron
James. I call it “It” comedy, a style of
comedy in which what transpires, rather than being a clever parody or a comedic
“switch” is instead exactly what you expect
is going to transpire. Without flourish
or fanfare, Hader is hilariously annihilated.
Which brings me – jumping over a lot of other stuff I could
talk about but won’t – to what I suddenly noticed while I was watching the
movie.
This observation may not rise to the level of a “Drumroll”
situation. But it is, I believe,
noteworthy, and if there are drummers not occupied elsewhere who are willing to
elevate the moment… Nah. It was just something that came up.
I believe the film process I am about to delineate began
with comedian Jerry Lewis back in the late sixties or early seventies. When he was directing a movie (in which he
was also starring), Lewis ran a “Video Assist” camera accompanying the filming
camera. In this way, Lewis was able to
look at the videotaped version of the filmed scene on a monitor and could immediately
decide if he was happy with what he had shot.
The biggest question during the filmmaking process itself
is, “Did we get it?”, meaning, did we
get the shot, did we get the performance.
Now in the “film only” era,
you had to send the exposed film to the lab and the developed footage was not
available for viewing for perhaps days.
With “Video Assist”, you could see what you’d shot right
away. And thus determine on the spot
whether to re-shoot, or instead announce the words that are music to every
movie participant’s ears:
“Moving on.”
FRUSTRATED “LAWRENCE
OF ARABIA” CAMEL: “He’s had me
trekking through the desert under the blistering sun for thirty-seven
takes. I swear to you. I don’t know how else to do it!”
Do not grill me too closely on the technology here, but
today, with the digital process , you no longer require a “Video Assist”
camera. In contrast to film, “shooting digital”
means you can see the recently shot footage right away. This is no big deal anymore. You can do it on your telephone. Not your landline. The other
kind.
I have no direct knowledge of what I am about to
suggest. But, judging by the results, it
would appear to me that when Trainwreck’s
Judd Apatow studies the monitor, his
concern is less “Did we get it?” than
“Can we make this scene funnier?”
Then, with the help of the performers, many of whom in Trainwreck are comedians (Amy Schumer, Bill Hader, Colin Quinn, Dave
Attell, Randall Park) and an accredited assemblage of comedy writers, Apatow
reshoots again and again, adjusting or augmenting the dialogue until each scene
is as hilarious as it can possibly be.
The result is, a funnier movie. (If “more” inevitably means “funnier.”)
The unintended consequence, however,, and what I picked up
while I was watching:
In an effort to cram each scene with as many jokes as
possible – as if each scene were not part of the tapestry of the movie but
instead a glimmering, stand-alone “Monument to Comedy”…
It shows.
The completed product is robbed of its rhythm and its identifiable
pace.
Instructed to “Go for it!” by the director, these gifted
comedians push their comedic mojos to the limit, scatter-shooting one wisecrack
after another until they finally strike “gold.”
Sometimes, the process gets messy.
In Trainwreck, I identified
two Game of Thrones references in the
same picture.
To succeed, a well-told story, like a band’s performance
playlist, must be scrupulously modulated.
(Says Earlo.) It is not helpful
to blast out one tune after another. It
can’t all be “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.” You need an “Eleanor Rigby” sandwiched in
between.
If a film script serves as only a “starting point” to be
eventually super-sized with improvised one-liners, at some point the balance of
the narrative will be diminished, generating a milieu of “Every punchline for
itself!” The audience leaves vaguely dissatisfied
without entirely knowing why.
Maybe younger audiences nurtured on “Zap! Zap!” video games are comfortable with this experience. Me, I miss the classic construction of Ninotchka and Some Like It Hot.
Of course, it they’d had monitors to look at back then,
Those movies might
have been funnier.
1 comment:
The other result is that Apatow's movies are always way too long. You could take 45 minutes out of this movie and it would play way funnier.
Post a Comment