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The spying game
ALISTAIR
McKAY
Charlie
Kaufman, the writer who bent reality into knotty shapes in Being John
Malkovich and Adaptation, has done it again. This time, his chosen genre
is the biopic, rendered between slices of documentary testimonial from
people who worked with the subject of the film, the American gameshow
pioneer Chuck Barris. At least, they look like people who worked with him.
They could be actors. But Barris is real, and this story is based on his
autobiographical journals (though he is played by Sam Rockwell). This
doesn’t make it true, as there exists the strong possibility that Barris
was a) making it up, or b) nuts.
The action starts with Barris,
naked, in a New York hotel room as, on television, that other showbiz
faker Ronald Reagan is sworn into office. Barris is reflecting glumly on
his wasted life. "When you’re young, your potential is infinite ..." Time
passes, the realisation sets in: "You weren’t Einstein. You weren’t
anything. It’s a bad moment."
The action flips back to Barris’s
seedy childhood - he only wanted to be loved - then to the start of his
television career. This section resembles the uniformed nostalgia of that
other autobiographical crime caper, Catch Me if You Can, and is an
unconvincing opening. There is something a little too plastic about the
vintage television cameras, the men in bow-ties, the girls drinking
Coca-Cola through straws. For a while, it looks as if Clooney the director
is going to wing it on charm, the way Clooney the actor did in Ocean’s
Eleven. There is something a little too loving about those scenes of men
in candy-striped blazers, downing tumblers of whisky on antique jet
planes. Happily, while Spielberg was nostalgic and soft-hearted, Kaufman
and Clooney are misanthropic. The unreality of the television world is
heightened to emphasise its emptiness, and to underscore Barris’s
contention that his success was hollow.
That success - writing a
hit record for the Palisades, inventing The Dating Game, The Newlywed Game
and The Gong Show - gives Barris access to everything he wanted, notably
girls, who line up for loveless sex. He meets Penny (Drew Barrymore), the
love of his loveless life, while he is standing naked inside a
refrigerator, and she fumbles inside the door, looking for beer.
So far, so showbiz. The story lurches left with the appearance of
CIA special agent Jim Byrd (Clooney, in trilby and moustache, looking like
a cross between Clark Gable and Donald Sutherland). Byrd invites Barris to
undertake some "problem-solving" work of a diplomatic nature: code for
becoming a freelance assassin. "Call it patriotism."
Is it
plausible that the CIA would hire a gameshow host as a hitman? Well, in
Barris’s world, where everything is implausible, it seems as likely as
anything, and the spy scenes are shot in light that emphasises coldness
and grit. The actual hokum of espionage, though, is as playful as Bond:
see the scene where Barris accompanies Bachelor No 3 to a wintry Helsinki
and encounters his contact, Patricia (Julia Roberts): a fantasy spy in
black hat, black fur and white kinky boots. He attempts to chat her up by
quoting Nabokov: "All the information I have about myself is from forged
documents."
http://news.scotsman.com/features.cfm?id=302472003
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