From the editor and writers of Bright Lights Film Journal
Action! Interviews with Directors from Classical Hollywood to Contemporary Iran
(Anthem Art and Culture), by Gary Morris (Editor), Bert Cardullo (Introduction), Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword). London and New York: Anthem Press, 2009.
(Anthem Art and Culture), by Gary Morris (Editor), Bert Cardullo (Introduction), Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword). London and New York: Anthem Press, 2009.
"I dare anyone to squeeze between
two covers a more varied, useful and
flat out entertaining sampling of
the personalities that make the
seventh art the liveliest."
David Hudson, IFC.com
David Hudson, IFC.com
Andy Kaufman, Tony Clifton, Mr. Ripley, and the Elisions of Udentity
I had an opportunity to see a double feature a couple of years ago
on a British Airways flight to Madrid. The size of the screen certainly
reduced any desire to give a shit about screen ratio. I was inclined
to dismiss the mere thought of watching a film on a screen smaller than
the screen of my computer. Yet the little screen wouldn't back down.
It took me ten minutes to figure out the channels, the volume, and the
right movie. Most of that time was spent on the latter, since I thought
I would only have time to watch one.
The Man on the Moon (1999) or The Talented Mr. Ripley
(1999)?
Neither Matt Damon nor Jim Carrey interested me as actors, and the
directors, Milos Forman and Anthony Minghella, ignited little passion
either, although 's track record seemed more formidable. There
was another, higher hurdle with this particular Forman vehicle. The
subject matter: Andy Kaufman, a man I had never found funny as Latka
or on Saturday Night Live, or doing his wrestling schtick. But
it was precisely my distaste for him, combined with having seen more
of his career than I had wanted to, that ultimately fueled my interest
in Man on the Moon. That is, I wanted to find out what made him
funny to other people, although under any other circumstance save being
trapped seven to eight hours in the air and unable to sleep, I would
never have watched either film.
What I didn't realize was that my view that his comedy seemed humorless
was correct but not in the way I wanted it to be. I understood that
he was pushing the envelope of humorless material to see exactly when
people would break down and accept it as humor. But knowing this put
me on his side, precisely where I didn't want to be. Perhaps
because I understood his attitude toward the mass audience and that
playing the audience for bunch of goofs was precisely the kind of action
with which I could sympathize.
Man
on the Moon, however, had all the standard biopic emotions and dramas
to which I couldn't relate aesthetically. As was true for the actors
in Chaplin and The Hurricane, also seen on flights to
Europe, Jim Carrey exhibited strong acting ability in closely impersonating
Kaufman, yet the film completely failed to intimate either the complexity
of the person or remotely hint at his having a worthy tragic flaw. On
a more celebrated scale, I found the same immobility at the centers
of Gandhi (1982) and Malcolm X (1992), whence the directors
reckoned on the real events to substitute for authentic drama. The romanticized
scope of the biography disguises the lack of a cinematic objective correlative
to the hero's greatness or the mystery of the personality.
The reviews of Man on the Moon hammered the point about not
revealing what made Kaufman tick. In effect, Forman allowed him to
remain an enigma while ingeniously exploiting the intentional fallacy.
The quirky introduction and ending of Man on the Moon with Kaufman
seemingly returning from the dead to direct his movie ... this was exactly
what Forman couldn't sustain. The film becomes overwhelmingly an anti-Andy
Kaufman-like project. The paradox arises that Forman adopts the traditional
explanatory movie biography, as in the ones mentioned above. We might
as well be watching A&E's Biography. The career and salient events
are rehashed, elements of the personality are flattened or enhanced
according to what makes the person less a prick, and the overall view
is sentimentalized. We might as well be discussing whether Kaufman really
hurt his neck and whether the incident on Letterman's show was staged.
[Editor's note: It was.] You leave the film with exactly what you arrived
with.
Well, almost all. Despite having seen many of the feature events in
Kaufman's career, I had never heard of Tony Clifton, his supposed alter
ego, the grossly unfunny lounge comic who voiced the misogyny that crept
into other portions of Andy's routines. (Or were all his routines merely
a sustained howl against those who wanted to see him perform?) As amazed
as I was to learn about him, Tony Clifton fit the general pattern of
Kaufman's anti-comedy. Yet, I know that I couldn't have seen so much
of his routines without having found Kaufman interesting at some level.
Watching
Kaufman played seamlessly played by Jim Carrey, I became physically
more discomfited in the airplane seat, slightly insomniac, and developed
an increasingly negative theory about his life and work. His comedic
career masked an inability to create humor. The film argues that Andy
wanted to be unfunny, was purposely unfunny. To quote him: I don't make
jokes. My premise bothered me because it smacked of past pejorative
judgments against Pop Art. And I realized his genius paralleled Andy
Warhol's, who also knew how to outrun emotional and creative vacuity.
There's only one catch. They're the only ones who could get away with
it. Kaufman was the Andy Warhol of Comedy and, as it happened, would
outlast and exhaust his audience's disapproval.
Getting away with something like this takes a psychological toll. The
person must hide further and further into himself, creating a labyrinth
of emotional and creative dead ends. Tony Clifton compensated for Kaufman
not being a jokemeister or simply a traditional comedian although
one might wonder whether comedy has to be Shecky Greene versus Andy
Kaufman. But even Tony Clifton would succumb and had to defy audience
taste and expectations for funny material. He became Kaufman's way to
exude bile toward audiences who would never find Andy funny not that
anyone was supposed to find him funny, but that's another end run to
avoid paying the piper. Or am I falling into the biopic trap by perceiving
Kaufman as the perfect personality to be doomed by showbiz success?
Thus, Kaufman's life becomes the living cliché he seems dedicated to
avoid. As soon as he acquires success, he falls apart. The Saturday
Night Live call-in vote to get him to stay or leave seems Kaufman's
internal prompting to self-destruct. In the biopic for an entertainer
even for Biography and MSNBC's Headliners and Legends
the cliche seems the only dramatic possibility.
His single, prolonged attempt at straight comedy, appearing as the
eccentric Latka in Taxi, merely confirmed his bitter feeling
for his audience. Screw everyone who wanted to see him "do Latka," and
he would screw them by reading the entire Great Gatsby
in a refined accent. Being the quintessential postmodern comedian, though,
should have entailed his being aware of audience predilections to want
what it likes. In fact, his playing to the wrestling crowd and explicitly
mocking the wrestling rituals (by trying to wrestle women) added to
the dung he was heaping upon his public.
Many might consider all postmodernism dung heaping, that is, an attempt
to prove to the audience that it is not capable of a certain level of
appreciation or perception. What this perception's level is might not
be totally clear, but it certainly rests in the entertainer's judgment
that nothing is authentic or that anything authentic can be exposed
as fraudulent. For Kaufman this translates into his apparent specialty
of creating multiple illusions.
First and foremost (and riskiest), the illusion that he was a comedian.
Staking everything on this was very bold for an unfunny man. Subsequent
illusions his loves (sexual needs), his friendships, his business
partnerships, his injuries and death all followed naturally. Maybe
this is why I feel little emotion for him or for, at least, the man
portrayed in the movie about him. He didn't die so much as he had never
existed, or nothing Andy Kaufman was existed enough for me to lament
his passing.
His life, perhaps, represents the inability to create tragedy. All
life becomes a parody of itself and nothing has substantial value. At
least, this is what life appears to be for those of us raised on television:
why seriously invest in something so easily debunked or made redundant
so quickly. And nothing exemplifies this better than the fact that the
one thing Kaufman apparently believed in was Transcendental Meditation.
Why this? Why not! In a world of the perfectly absurd, TM would do as
the spiritual absurdity to negate the absurd. He had to believe in something,
I suppose, but even he (and Forman) doesn't want to dwell on it.
Man on the Moon's stance on Kaufman's life never appears. Then,
again, how could it criticize him when Kaufman essentially fashioned
an uncriticizable act? Forman couldn't say he wasn't funny or his life
was overvalued because he was never trying to be funny. The limits of
biopic do not allow such criticism of its subject/sacred cow á la Malcolm
X or Ghandi. Kaufman's seemingly gratuitous death sanctified him as
much as assassination sanctified the aforesaid men.
Nothing encouraged my feeling that Andy Kaufman was the quintessential
man of his generation more than watching The Talented Mr. Ripley
immediately after Man on the Moon. Ripley, like Kaufman, was
at his best not being himself. His compulsion to fit in somehow stemmed
from a personal void Forman's film completely ignores any exploration
of Andy's motivation or from a personality enhanced by its cannibalizing
other personalities. Tony Clifton chewed and spit out (or left undigested)
regular comedy routines. As Kaufman's career revenged itself on the
audience, Ripley's penchant for playing wealthy socialites was his revenge
on a society that, he believed, had no use for him. Thus, The Talented
Mr. Ripley acted as a creative critique of Kaufmanism.
Anthony Minghella portrays Ripley as society's victim, the victim of
Fifites' society. Like another cinematic sociopath, Strangers on
a Train's Bruno Antony, he starts from an elementary laziness. They
choose to be dreamers, projectors, and players at high society. Ripley
adds con artist to his repertoire. He believes he can fit in, learn
to function in that elite group, and finally be accepted as one of them.
He knows the concepts by which this society works and fashions his con
artistry around those concepts until he cannot tell who he himself really
is. He becomes the creation of himself and lost within that creation.
When he's found out and cornered, voluntarily or not, only then does
he kill. He moves on to become someone else to fool the next socialites
willing to be fooled. The suggestion at the end of the film is that
as long as he desires to be anything other than himself, he will murder
indefinitely.
Andy Kaufman had admirers willing to accept anything he did as an act
of genius. Yet, he would even try their patience and lose support. Taxi
eventually was cancelled, and he lost the Saturday Night Live
vote. He needed to create other comedic illusions. The wrestling matches
stirred up a new audience.
But one can only play the public so long. It seems almost too pat that
he had to die at the age of thirty-eight and that his dying and/or death
would be seen as another Kaufman stunt. I found this the most believable
part of the film I could believe he would try this. There was Elvis
before him (Andy was a primeval Elvis impersonator), and even JFK, and
even JC. A twisted logic might compel me to say that his career had
nowhere else to go. The ultimate humor of exhaustion. More, if his dying
and resurrection are an act, it's as unfunny as the Mighty Mouse song
and his previous manifestations of humor.
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