Lenny
Movie Review:
Most
film biographies depict extraordinary people, presented
glowingly. By this, I mean that we have little ambiguity
about the belief that the person in the film is a great,
inspiring, individual. Of course, this has to happen, because
why make a movie about a useless real person that lasts
two to three hours?? At the very least, the subjects` flaws
are dwarfed by their attributes.
This
leads us to Bob Fosse`s bio of comedian Lenny Bruce. Bruce
certainly contributed to society, by drawing attention to
the freedom of speech issue, which he defended numerous
times, even while being arrested for obscenity. Much of
his comedy dealt head-on with subjects which, at the time,
nobody would talk about. This film does not question these
facts, and is certainly worthy of a film bio. But Bob Fosse
does something else, which is very risky, and that is to
present its subject not as a hero of free-speech, but as
a complex, deeply flawed individual. This is all the more
risky when you are dealing with an entertainer, as well
as someone who apparently did so much to expose the world
to the futility of censorship. People want to see the glamour
and the success, they want to see someone bold and daring
enough to fight for our rights. But they don`t want to feel
depressed, or be forced to truly think about this individual,
but that is what Lenny forces you to experience.
Lenny
Bruce fans have expressed their discontent in such places
as the film`s entry in the Internet Movie Database. Dustin
Hoffman is miscast as Lenny, the routines aren`t funny,
the plot is not detailed enough, and so on. There is no
doubt that the film does not show us a lot of comedy....
but this is not a comedy film, but a drama. Dustin Hoffman
is a great actor, and he does what he can, and does in fact
pull off the task of giving us a glimpse into Bruce`s comedy.
And the plot.... well, Fosse does give us a plot, but not
the one rabid fans probably expected.
My
opinion is that a vast majority of the Lenny Bruce fans
were disappointed because they ended up seeing a film rather
than a love-in (think of Man on The Moon, the Andy Kaufman
bio which dealt with a somewhat related personality, yet
felt about as unbiased and blunt as a political pamphlet,
sacrificing truth for constant attempts at laughter). Lenny
is a dark, grim piece of work, shot in moody black-and-white,
and absent of any forced attempts at humour, warmth, or
sentimentality. That is just the way Bob Fosse sees this
story.
The
film details the rise and fall of this famous comedian.
At first, he performs lousy comedy and poor imitations at
cheap nightclubs. And in his personal life, he meets Honey
Harlowe, a stripper played by Valerie Perrine. As the years
go by, the two get married, and Bruce the comic becomes
famous for pushing the envelope (the movie does not quite
get into detail on his change in comedic insight). His personal
and professional lives both intertwine and mirror each other.
This occurs as a result of the two of them becoming heavily
involved in drugs and other hedonistic activities, while
at the same time, his career takes numerous hits due to
charges of obscenity. The rest of the film depicts a free
fall into utter self-destruction.
Dustin
Hoffman portrays Lenny as a deeply flawed individual, whose
biggest flaw is that he cannot handle the pressure of being
both famous and persecuted. Over and over, he is charged
for obscenity, which creates a situation where he is even
more popular, and the film implies that this has little
to do with his talent but rather his notoriety, and the
chance that something even more outrageous might happen.
At first, he is able to survive the attention with his humour
intact. But, soon, his troubles are a curse, a scarlet letter,
which ruins him. The single most wrenching scene in this
regard is a performance where he wanders out, in a trenchcoat,
high as a kite, and delivers a rambling, incoherent rant
on entrapment and harassment. This ends when he whispers
desperately to the audience that he cannot take it anymore,
that he is not funny, and walks out. This entire sequence
is done in one unbroken, unmoving long shot. The camera
cruelly, dispassionately witnesses his despair as well as
the audience`s reaction.
Bob
Fosse`s camera also cruelly witnesses Lenny Bruce no longer
in fashion with the crowd. This occurs in a running commentary
throughout the film, presented as a performance taking place
after much of the actual story in the film. Bruce is supremely
obsessed with his legal troubles, and the meaning of obscenity,
and all this causes is an alienated audience, who slowly
drift away from him.
Another
important aspect of the film involves his personal life.
In the Andy Kaufman bio, for example, we are presented with
a loving, eccentric couple. But in Lenny we see manipulation,
lies and misery. We know about the drugs. We also know that
Lenny has had affairs, and lied about them. We are also
witness to a painful result of Lenny`s need to push the
boundaries even in his personal relations. Lenny, in one
scene, tells Honey that he wants to engage in a threesome
with her and another woman. Honey attempts to get out of
it, but can`t, because she is unable to respond to Lenny`s
claims that if she loves him, she will do this for him.
We actually do get to see this threesome, but not in the
way we expect. Played against complete silence, helped by
the black-and-white cinematography, the fears and curiosity
in Honey`s face are juxtaposed with the imposing presence
of the act`s orchestrator, and we are soon witness to more
emotional pain.
What
Bob Fosse does is give us an open-ended view of this person.
We are forced to think whether he was a great man done in
by society, or whether he did himself in, while society
enjoyed the spectacle for a time before they got bored.
Either one of these conclusions may work. Personally, I
was leaning toward the latter. Throughout the viewing of
this film, I had the feeling that Lenny was setting himself
up for a fall. He marries someone who is certainly his sexual
fantasy, so expects her to follow that fantasy. His comedy
shocks the world, and brings issues to light, but has the
misfortune of being unable to defend himself without sounding
like a bore, or, usually, utterly desperate. The man was
not just a martyr for the rights and freedoms of the rest
of us, but was a victim of his own hungers and needs.
David
Macdonald
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