| |
The
Kid Stays In The Picture Review:
Synopsis
The Kid Stays In A Picture traces the meteoric rise, fall and
rise again of legendary Hollywood producer Robert Evans. Having
successfully produced some superb films such as Francis Ford
Coppola's The Godfather and Roman Polanski's Chinatown, Evans'
career faltered in the early 1980s thanks to a cocaine bust
and his rumoured involvement in the 'Cotton Club' murder.
In the early
1990s, the producer rallied again, as he secured the rights
to The Saint and released Sliver. This documentary, adapted
from his bestselling autobiography, chronicles his life, his
loves (with the likes of Ali Macgraw) and friendships (with
Jack Nicholson, Roman Polanski, Henry Kissinger and Dustin Hoffman).
Evans actually narrates the 90 minute journey himself.
Critique
Tracing
the rollercoaster career of Hollywood producer Robert Evans,
The Kid Stays In The Picture is a fascinating documentary that
will particularly appeal to film buffs. Narrated by the man
himself and adapted from the autobiography of the same name,
this non-fiction journey begins with Evans landing a surprise
acting career on the East Coast. After a few roles, it became
evident that his acting skills were almost non-existent and
a career change was in order - Evans, or 'The Kid', decided
that he wanted to turn his attention to running a studio and
getting involved in off-camera activities.
Before long, he was
a top executive at Paramount, which was the ninth biggest film
studio at the time. After the emergence of a few disappointing
projects, the Board of Directors stated that they were going
to close the filmmaking company and terminate the production
of all unfinished films. Evans put together a historic 20 minute
appeal onto film and showed it to the Board in person - his
desperate plea was successful and Paramount was allowed to continue
operating on a probationary basis.
Over the next few
years, the studio released massive hits, such as Love Story
and The Godfather, which become worldwide money-makers, thus
elevating Paramount from ninth to first in the studio league
table. Deciding he wanted to do more hands-on producing himself,
Evans set out to put together some films of his own. His first
project was Chinatown, one of the finest films of all-time,
while Marathon Man, starring Dustin Hoffman, followed soon after
- it seemed that Evans' success was far from diminishing. However,
Hollywood closed its door on The Kid after he was linked to
a murder and exposed as a cocaine abuser, leaving him well and
truly in the cold. Depressed and near-suicidal, Evans' life
was on a drastic downwards U-turn and his fall was even speedier
than his meteoric rise. Iit was only in the early 1990s when
The Kid started to claw his life back inch by inch.
Directed by Nanette
Burstein and Brett Morgen, this riveting tale will even be of
interest to film fans who have never heard of Robert Evans before.
The mix of archived footage, film clips and news reports is
joined together excellently, while The Kid's narration is frank
and very rarely evasive. Some of the anecdotes are particularly
intriguing, such as the section devoted to The Godfather. Evans
claims that Francis Ford Coppola's original cut of the film
was quite short and it was only after the producer's stern protest
that the epic was lengthened to the form we know it by today.
Furthermore, clips
from the legendary appeal to Paramount's Board of Directors
are included, along with tidbits of interesting information
on Rosemary's Baby, which Evans got made with Roman Polanski
in the director's chair. By the time of this documentary DVD's
release, Evans had been married six times - five of the unions
ended in divorce and the other was anulled - however, only his
relationship with actress Ali McGraw is mentioned at length.
Equally detailed information on the other five ladies may have
not been relevant to the documentary, but some form of passing
mention should have been inserted at the very least. As the
documentary stands, the viewer is left with the false impression
that Evans only married once.
The only significant
flaw of the feature is perhaps the brevity of its ending - Evans
has started to produce films again (although not as freqently
and successfully as before) and his general return is not treated
to a fitting level of detail. Even his fall from grace seems
to rush past at times, leading to some slight disappointment.
Overall, however, this is a fantastic look at one of Hollywood's
legendary figures - watch the highs, lows, scandals and successes
unfold in your living room.
8
out of 10
The
Video
The
video quality for titles like these is far less important than
in the case of film discs. Presented in anamorphic widescreen,
the documentary is made almost entirely out of film clips, news
archive footage and photographs. The only significant items
of newly-shot material are the ghostly yet beautiful camera
moves around Evans' secluded home. This brand new footage looks
great, exhibiting perfect black levels and vivid colour reproduction,
while there is no print damage on display and sharpness levels
are fine.
The remaining material
looks as good as can be reasonably expected, with the image
quality fluctuating wildly as the source material is switched.
The photographs are, of course, the clearest, while the film
clips finish a distant second. The worst looking portions are
the archived news clips and interviews, which have obviously
not been preserved very well over the years but are still clear
enough.
As stated before,
however, this is a documentary and all that matters is that
the transfer is watchable - thankfully, this is indeed the case
and the overall impression of the visuals is a good one.
8
out of 10
The Audio As
with the video quality, the only thing the soundtrack for a
title like this needs to provide is clarity. There is no need
for a Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack and the disc sticks with
the expected Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo format - note that the
Region 1 disc does actually feature a 5.1 stream. Evans' narration
is crystal clear, while the original soundtracks of the various
clips used are always intelligible. Overall, therefore, the
disc delivers all it basically needs to in terms of sound quality.
8
out of 10
The
Extras
Most
documentaries are presented with no bonus material whatsoever,
making the extras on this disc a nice surprise despite their
modest quantity. Note that all the supplements are in 1.33:1
full-frame, unless otherwise stated, with Dolby Digital 2.0
Stereo sound. Up first is the 2 minute US theatrical trailer,
which is presented in non-anamorphic widescreen - someone who
unwittingly stumbles across this could quite conceivably believe
in places that it is an advert for a real film, the biopic of
a powerful Hollywood producer.
The extras continue
with a 10 minute reel of red carpet celebrity interviews on
Evans. All of these appear to have been conducted at The 2003
Spirit Of Life Award ceremony celebrating the producer's career
and are, obviously, very praising and positive. A few associates
from The Kid's professional life can be seen here, along with
his son, Director Brett Ratner and Matthew McConaughey. There's
nothing new to learn about Evans himself and these bite-sized
interview snippets turn out to be quite hollow in the end.
The next bonus material
item, the 7 minute Evans gag reel, is a true gem. This incredibly
rare (non-anamorphic widescreen) montage is the complete collection
of outtakes from 1976's Marathon Man where Dustin Hoffman hilariously
improvises a handful of scenes in the style of The Kid. Hoffman
comes up with some totally random yet amusing lines and the
longest outtake is actually shown during the end credits of
the documentary itself. This final blooper is more poignant
than Hoffman could have ever imagined at the time, since in
it, the actor pretends that Evans becomes washed up and suicidal
over the next 20 years.
Up next are 4 lengthy
'The Truth According To Bob' clips, which clock up another 37
minutes of viewing in total. The first clip, 'The Film That
Saved Paramount', is the famous plea to the studio's board of
directors mentioned in the documentary. Running at 8 minutes,
this is the original footage in non-anamorphic widescreen, although
the actual film clips that Evans mentions have been removed
and replaced by title cards with a few seconds of audio commentary
from the man himself. This historical piece of footage was a
thoughtful addition to the disc.
The second clip,
'The Kid Stays On The Red Carpet', runs for only a minute and
sees the producer share a few forgettable thoughts with the
camera during The 2003 Spirit Of Life Award ceremony. The third
item in this section, labelled 'Receiving The Spirit Of Life
Award', is thankfully much more substantial over its 15 minute
course. Famous US television personality Larry King presents
the award to Evans, who tearfully recounts an encounter that
he had with King a fair while back that affected his life profoundly.
The producer talks about how he had recently found true love
and got married (for the sixth time in his life) - sadly, he
filed for another divorce not too long afterwards.
The fourth clip,
'Receiving The Lifetime Achievement Award', is 13 minutes long
and Evans' old pal Dustin Hoffman is the accolade presenter
this time round. Hoffman is incredibly charming and funny as
he shares a lengthy memory of The Kid with the audience before
handing over the award. On a final note, the menus are animated
and accompanied by background sound in Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo.
Overall, this collection
of extras is extensive compared to most documentary titles,
although hardly immense by any standards. The Dustin Hoffman
gag reel and Evans' appeal to the board of directors are the
two most important, historic items here and very interesting,
but the remainder is certainly not amazing. The most disappointment
perhaps comes from the fact that the US Region 1 disc also features
an audio commentary for the documentary by the two directors
(Nanette Burstein and Brett Morgen), along with a few other
featurettes.
6
out of 10
RATINGS
SUMMARY Movie
8
Video 8
Audio 8
Extras 6
OVERALL (not an average) 7
DVD
Bulletin
Site
Contents Copyright© The Z Review, unless used with permission.This
site has no intention to infringe on the rights of the film
owners of The Kid Stays In The Picture and intellectual copyright
holders of the movies mentioned herein & hold copyright
over the movie, characters, merchandise & storyline.
|
| The
Kid Stays In The Picture Technical Info: |
| Starring:
Robert Evans
Director:
Nanette Burstein, Brett Morgen
Rating:
15
Studio:
Momentum
Pictures Home Entertainment
Reviewed
by:
DVD Bulletin
Buy
The Kid Stays In The Picture on DVD now!
Search
our database of DVD reviews:
A,B,C,D,E,F,G,
H,I,J,K,L,M,N,
O,P,Q,R,S,T,U,
V,W,X,Y,Z
We
want your reviews, email them
here!
|
|