Games People Play: New York Movie Review:
At first
glance, James Ronald Whitney's Games People Play: New York
appears to be what one might call an extreme reality game
- a combination of "Fear Factor" and "Candid
Camera" with stunts so over-the-top that even an R
rating would be unattainable. But first glances can be deceiving,
especially when the viewer takes the time to look a little
deeper. Sure, Games People Play: New York is the ultimate guilty pleasure
with plenty of eye candy (in the form of full-frontal male
and female nudity), but there's more to the film than fit,
naked bodies. Not only does Whitney (who admits in the production
notes to being "a reality whore") do a credible
ape of reality game shows, but he offers some emotional
resonance. Part documentary, part parody, and part something
indefinable, the film manages to succeed on its own terms
and entertain on just about anyone's.
First,
the premise. Whitney introduces himself as a man making
a pilot for a new breed of game show - one that requires
the contestants to be physically and emotionally uninhibited.
Hundreds of wannabe actors answer his open casting call,
and, after a day's worth of screen tests, he whittles down
the field to the final six: Joshua Coleman, Sarah Smith,
Scott Ryan, Dani Marco, David Maynard, and Elisha Imani
Wilson. Over the next two days, they participate in a variety
of stunts and have an intimate, revealing talk with two
judges (Dr. Gilda Carle and Jim Caruso). The stunts are,
to say the least, outrageous. They include one in which
the guys must solicit urine samples from men on New York
streets (the one who gets the most in an hour wins). Another
has a male/female team pick up a random stranger and convince
him to appear naked with them in a "Nude Trio"
cabaret number performed in a hotel room. Then there's the
Casting Couch. And what happens when a woman dressed in
only a towel answers the door for a delivery boy, then allows
the towel to slip?
Certainly,
the titillation aspect is high, causing Games People Play: New York
to deliver in a way that The Real Cancun didn't. But how
much of what we see is genuine? That's the lingering question,
and, ultimately, the lack of a definitive answer is what
makes the film compelling. The final fifteen minutes, which
purport to reveal the truth, deepen the mystery. Are these
six actors real people, or are they fictions? The press
notes give detailed bios for each of them, but fake personal
histories are easy to concoct. Was the film scripted, or
were these contestants truly competing in a game? Whitney
seems to play it straight, but one gets the impression that
there's a wink-and-a-nod in there somewhere.
Regardless
of what the film actually is (and Whitney would be a fool
to tell), there are some things it unquestionably does well.
The first is to take a cold, hard look at the inexplicably
popular phenomenon of "reality television" (a
misnomer if there ever was one). You know the kinds of shows
that I'm talking about - where good looking people do incredibly
embarrassing things in order to gain their fifteen minutes
of fame and win a paltry cash prize. These shows get big
ratings. Here, Whitney takes things farther than any network
would ever dare go, and the six contestants come along for
the ride, nipples pointing straight ahead and penises swinging.
As one of them remarks, it's not really about the $10,000
prize. It's about the challenge.
Games People Play: New York has its serious side, as well. Without becoming
maudlin, it touches on such sober issues as eating disorders,
child molestation, and male prostitution. Each of the contestants
has something ugly lurking in his or her past, and, as a
result of a candid conversation, these stories come out.
Of course, there's the nagging question of whether the tale
is legitimate or whether it’s a fabrication designed
to elicit sympathy.
One
would expect Games People Play: New York to have widespread
appeal within its target demographic. University students,
who are old enough to get in (no one under 18 will be admitted),
will adore what Whitney has put on the screen, not just
because it's funny and full of nudity, but because it's
smart. It's currently booked for ten locations (New York,
Los Angeles, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Washington D.C.,
Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta, Boston, and Dallas), with a rollout
between March 12, 2004 and May 14. After that, I expect
it to have a healthy video life. Perhaps the best news of
all is that this is the first episode of a trilogy. Games People Play: New York: Hollywood is in post-production, and Games People Play: New York: The Bible Belt will follow. The challenge for
Whitney will be to take these other films in new directions.
I look forward to seeing what that is.
Rating:
*** out of ****
©
2004 James Berardinelli
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