REEL CRITICS -- John Depko and Ryan Gilmore
- Share via
Keep your kids away from ‘Smoochy’
Danny DeVito’s “Death to Smoochy” is a strange dark comedy that
totally skewers the world of children’s television. It takes direct aim
at popular kiddie shows that feature animal characters. Surrogates for
Barney and Big Bird are placed squarely in DeVito’s wicked gun sights.
In this malicious satire, all the stars of the Kid TV Network are
foulmouthed drunks, drug addicts or crazy men whose vices lead to their
downfall. This R-rated movie is definitely not for youngsters.
Robin Williams is frenetic as the hate-filled Rainbow Randolph Smiley,
who ends up broke and homeless after being busted for taking bribes from
parents who want their kids to be on his show. Enter Ed Norton as a sappy
and idealistic entertainer for kids who is hired by the network to
replace Randolph and save their ratings.
Norton puts on a baggy pink costume and becomes Smoochy the Rhino, the
politically correct kid show host. DeVito plays the sleazy agent who
tries to take Smoochy down the tainted path of his previous clients.
Wild plot developments unfold at a frantic pace. There are dueling
gangs of mobsters, a collection of neo-Nazis, a brain-damaged prize
fighter, dwarfs and murders played for laughs. A bizarre mix of scenes
and characters that are occasionally very funny, but always peculiar.
Bad language and crude sight gags abound. Amusing but vulgar, the
target audience for this fare would appear to be teenage boys with short
attention spans.
As director and star of this effort, DeVito seems to be desperately
trying to recapture the zany atmosphere of his past hits: “The War of the
Roses” and “Throw Mama from the Train.” He is only partly successful.
o7 “Death to Smoochy” is rated R for language and sexual references.
f7 * JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
‘Panic Room” pays off in suspense
“Panic Room,” the new film by director David Fincher, never lacks for
suspense. Fincher, whose previous work includes “Fight Club,” “The Game,”
and “Seven,” once again succeeds in making the audience anxious and
uncomfortable. In any other context, provoking such feelings would be
tantamount to complete failure, but in a suspense-thriller they are
necessary elements that are so often lacking in today’s predictable
formula films.
The film revolves around a room designed to be a fortress against home
invasion in an immense Manhattan townhouse. However, the audience learns,
along with the protagonists, that such a room can be easily transformed
from a sanctuary into a trap for its inhabitants.
Meg Altman, played by Jodie Foster, is recently divorced from her
millionaire husband and moves into the townhouse with her 11-year-old
daughter, Sarah. Unbeknownst to them, three men have set their sights on
a fortune that is hidden in the panic room.
These would-be thieves are initially thrown off by the fact that the
home is already inhabited, an unforeseen difficulty that their greed
convinces them they can overcome.
Junior (Jared Leto) is the grandson of the deceased former owner of
the townhouse, and he wants to retrieve the hidden money and avoid
sharing a penny with other heirs and the government in estate taxes.
Burnham (Forest Whitaker) is the security expert who designed the panic
room and needs the money to support his children and ex-wife. Dwight
Yoakam, the country singer, once again proves to be the guy you love to
hate. Yoakam played the villainous Doyle Hargraves in the film “Sling
Blade” and is a menacing sociopath known only as “Raoul” in “Panic Room.”
Jodie Foster once again delivers a stunning performance not unlike her
role as Special Agent Clarice Starling in “The Silence of the Lambs.” She
alternates between strength and vulnerability perfectly, thus keeping the
audience from lulling into a sense of security by believing that she is
an invulnerable action hero.
Overall, this film is a highly effective suspense-thriller. The only
disappointment that I perceived was the director’s overuse of special
effects shots in which the camera zoomed through walls, floors and even
key holes with the aid of computer graphics. I felt that these shots,
although trying to create a modified version of Hitchcock’s style, were
distracting and unnecessary.
It may be that Fincher did not have faith that today’s audience,
hooked on films shot in the instant gratification-style of music videos,
would be patient enough to wait for the old-fashioned suspense to kick
into gear.
But aside from these minor distractions, “Panic Room” really delivers
with an intense story line and fine performances by all the actors.
o7 “Panic Room” is rated R for violence and language.f7
* RYAN GILMORE is a Costa Mesa resident.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.