54. This is essentially Whit Stillman's Last Days of Disco and Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie Nights mixed together and mildly dumbed down. It tells the story of Shane (played in Greek-god-with-a-lobotomy style by Ryanne Phillippe), a beautiful New Jersey boy who comes to the big city and finds happiness in the drug-crazed party atmosphere of legendary discotheque Studio 54. While we're treated to endless images of tasty men cavorting shirtless in the club of dreams, the movie lacks substance beyond the free play of manly nipples. Mike Meyers is particularly awful as Steve Rubell, Studio 54's Quaalude-loving impresario, hamming it up like a drunker, gayer version of Austin Powers. Director Mark Christopher may have meant to make a downbeat, moralizing film, but in failing at that he at least makes something that shows how much fun the New York club scene was. There seems to be no consequence to any action in this fairy-tale version of the late '70s/early '80s: Shane's drug use is condemned but never gets him into any trouble; the marriage of his two closest friends is strained by their club life, but not terribly so; and even Rubell's prison sentence seems like nothing more than a brief vacation from the rigors of all-night partying. This film manages to capture the ambiance of the disco scene in a way that other films have not, making 54 a lightly pleasant nostalgia piece that casts an unwittingly kind and loving glance at that magical era that brought us Donna Summers, the herpes epidemic, and glittery spandex posing straps. --DiGiovanna THE GOVERNESS. Minnie Driver plays Rosina, a beautiful and spirited 19th-century Jewish girl whose life changes after her father dies, leaving the family destitute. To survive she must either marry a smelly old fishmonger, become a whore, or pass for a gentile and go work among the uptight goyim. So she becomes a governess (disguised under the vaguely Goth pseudonym Mary Blackchurch), and somehow manages to combine all three. She finds a position on an island and ends up falling for the man of the house, Mr. Cavendish (the utterly unappealing Tom Wilkinson), a brooding man of science. The two invent photography, oddly enough, but Cavendish is so repressed he freaks out because Rosina/Mary Blackchurch is forever wanting to get naked with him. (If you're dying to see Minnie Driver in the buff, this film is for you.) Meanwhile Cavendish's hot young son is swooning for Rosina, rolling around in her bedcovers and such, but she'll have nothing to do with him. This has the feel of a once-good script that's been homogenized and dumbed down by the movie studio for ease of digestion. First-time writer and director Sandra Goldbacher shows some spunk, but this ends up being just another one of those pointless period movies where everyone's always overcoming repressive times by having sex. --Richter PASSION IN THE DESERT. Rather astonishingly, this film is about a man who falls in love with a leopard. The setting is Egypt, the time is the late 18th century, and soldier Augustin Robert (Ben Daniels) gets lost in the dunes but is miraculously saved by a pretty spotted kitty cat. Perhaps she likes his over-tanned skin, or his Hercules-style mane of flowing bleached hair. Or his shaved chest. Or his big muscular body. The two set up housekeeping, but naturally such a love is not destined to last, even if the man involved is a French man. This movie certainly gets points for being strange, and for having a cast that consists almost entirely of a man and a four-footed creature. There is little dialogue. Yet despite this, it's curiously flat and lackluster. Dare I say it--there's just no chemistry between Daniels and that darn cat. --Richter PERMANENT MIDNIGHT. If you hate Ben Stiller's acting, you'll want to avoid Permanent Midnight like it was a weekend with Richard Simmons. If not, this is definitely worth checking out. Although not long on originality, this true story of Jerry Stahl, the heroin-addicted writer for the TV series Alf, has some creative and engaging moments, including the best crack-smoking scene ever filmed. In the role of Stahl, Stiller does his entire quivering, double-talking, hyper-active shtick here, and it works well in conveying the excited desperation of someone on the edge of fame. Still, I know a good number of people who find Stiller unbearable, and this is him at his most intense. Maria Bello (of ER) turns in a creditable performance as the anonymous woman who finds him working at a drive-through burger stand after his rehabilitation; and Elizabeth Hurley plays her standard role as Stahl's beautiful green-card wife, but really it's Stiller's show. Even if you can't stand him, at least slip in for the last few minutes where, as Stahl, he goes on all the talk shows for the obligatory post-modern, post-addiction, post-recovery, public self-flagellation. --DiGiovanna SIMON BURCH. Hollywood has the Oscars on its mind, and, since films about mentally and/or physically challenged people are surefire Oscar bait (Children of a Lesser God, Rain Man, Forrest Gump), Disney goes for the jugular with a story about the very, very tiny Simon Burch (Ian Michael Smith). The unfortunate result is an assemblage of loosely related scenes which milk the shock value of Smith's physical appearance in an attempt to force viewers onto an emotional roller coaster. A weak plot does surface about two-thirds into the movie, but by then the audience has already been subjected to at least a dozen references to Simon as a miracle/hero/instrument of God, a Forrest Gump-ian use of an overly obvious soundtrack, and a whole lotta wooden child acting (not Smith). The real tragedy of the film is that its dramatic impact derives not from Simon's character, and the obstacles a norm-obsessed society tosses his way, but rather from exploiting how different Smith looks. Jim Carrey provides cutesy narration and the always likable Oliver Platt contributes to the few digestible scenes. --Higgins SLUMS OF BEVERLY HILLS. This manipulative, cautious and contrived comedy came out of the stifling Sundance Workshop, and it shows. Like every other movie these days, it's set in the '70s. The won't-this-be-touching story focuses on a young girl coming of age, and her efforts to accept her body and her family, who are a little off-beat, but not so off-beat as to challenge the audience's beliefs or sensibilities. Alan Arkin does his usual decent job playing the aging single father. (God forbid there should be a single mother in a lighthearted film...single mothers equal tragedy and pain.) The jokes are all reasonably funny, there's enough sex to make it titillating but not enough to push it into controversy, and there's a general lack of plot. Perhaps the most interesting thing about this intentionally forgettable film are the body doubles: both Marissa Tomei and newcomer Natasha Lyonne must show their breasts at least twice, but their faces are never in the shot, and the actresses hired to stand in for them sport bodies with no visual relation to the ones they're supposed to represent. A real oddity, that: There's Tomei, she gratuitously opens her robe, and suddenly there's a shot from the neck down of someone else's body. I guess if you're doing tits-for-tits-sake you might as well bring in the best you can find, and damn the torpedoes. Other than the curious interest that provides, though, the film refuses to take any chances or do anything risky, and winds up being so benign as to be a bit boring. Perhaps this can be blamed on the heavy and notoriously treacly hand of Robert Redford, who produced this cowardly, if somewhat humorous, project. --DiGiovanna YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS. Pessimistic filmmaker Neil LaBute follows up his much-lauded first film The Company of Men with this bleak and funny look at couple-dynamics. Everyone is named Cary or Jerry or Barry or Cherry or Mary or something here, and they all hop in and out of bed with each other in search of something like satisfaction. Of course, they just end up feeling more despair. LaBute really pushes things over the top with some wonderfully evil characters (Jason Patrick plays a wildly misogynistic gynecologist), and by stubbornly refusing all the characters the tiniest shard of redemption. It's mean, but it's funny too--sort of like if Woody Allen had written Carnal Knowledge. --Richter DANCE WITH ME. In this piece that appears to have been penned by a standardized script-writing computer, a beautiful Cuban youth comes to America to find his father, the girl of his dreams, and a career as a celebrated ballroom dancer. I wonder if he will succeed?! The editing is perhaps the most atrocious I've ever seen in a big-budget production. One phone conversation is doubled in length by the fact that director Randa Haines can't seem to cut away from the last speaker fast enough, alternately leaving Vanessa Williams and male lead Chayanne standing there with strained "can we cut now?" expressions on their faces for several seconds after they speak each line. Even worse is the cinematography: The dance scenes are all shot in close-up. This travesty made me want to ask Haines if the word "duh" meant anything to her. All she had to do was rent any Gene Kelly or Fred Astaire movie to see how to shoot people dancing. Here's a clue: Include their feet in the shot; and while you're at it, why not include the rest of their bodies? Other than the fact that it successfully creates the illusion of movement through the rapid succession of still images, this film is a complete and utter waste of time. --DiGiovanna PI. A New York mathematician searches for a number that, when placed in a formula, can effectively predict the ebb and flow of the stock market. In the process, he may just be discovering the secret to life and God--by way of Wall Street, Hebrew scripture, spiral patterns, and the ancient game of Go. Darren Aronofsky produced this audaciously premised first feature on the tiniest of budgets, but he gets the most out of his settings by using gritty black-and-white photography, smart editing and high-contrast lighting. And dig that techno music soundtrack! In addition to technical savvy, Aronofsky also proves himself a first-rate director of ideas, effectively communicating the kinds of connective concepts that might be more at home in a book like The Tao of Physics than on the screen. It's too bad, then, that Aronofsky decided to reduce Pi's second half to a neat little plot. He throws ideas on the back burner and instead opts for chase scenes and insanity. Consequently, lead actor Sean Gullette, whose hand shakes even more violently than that of Tom Hanks in Saving Private Ryan, totally freaks out. Then the Robert DeNiro Rules take over: If there is hair, you must shave it; if there is a mirror, you must punch it; if there is a drill, you must use it on your skull; and so on. It's a silly finale for an otherwise stimulating film. --Woodruff
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