Friday, 1 December 2017

The Room


2003’s “The Room”, written and directed by Tommy Wiseau.

Starring Tommy Wiseau, Greg Sestero, Juliette Danielle, Philip Haldiman, and
Carolyn Minnott.

What is it about?

The Room is about an older romantic company man (Wiseau) who’s fiery finance (Juliette Danielle), starts an affair with Wiseau’s athletic best friend (Greg Sestero), much to Danielle’s mother (Carolyn Minnott)’s chagrin. Wiseau also has an orphan (Philip Haldiman) that he takes care of, who is deeply attached to Wiseau and Danielle. Will Wiseau figure out what his loved ones are hiding from him and be able to survive the betrayal?

Why is it worth seeing?

“The Room” is a cult classic, a tour de farce that is not recommended for those who don’t care for ironic camp cinema. Left for dead during a self distributed 2 week 1 theatre run when it was originally released, a combination of advertising (a Los Angeles billboard that bizarrely featured Tommy Wiseau’s face), and summer forest fire temperature word of mouth revolution catapulted it into conversations alongside “Showgirls”, “Glen or Glenda”, “Plan 9 from Outer Space”, and “Troll 2” as the greatest bad movies of all time.
Part of the appeal of “The Room” is it’s bizarre anti-auteur’s stance on his film’s reception. After realizing that it’s greatest appeal was for ironic theatre goers to get together and throw things at the screen while shouting along with the movie’s inanity, Wiseau doubled down on how the movie was meant to be a comedy, and yes, you should see it twice. Unlike, say, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” (which has an understanding of it’s fringe appeal), “The Room” wasn’t originally meant to be a midnight movie classic- but has become one.
We’ll never know what the room is, in “The Room”. Yes, much of the movie takes place in a sad sack San Francisco suite featuring a spiral staircase into a sexy time chamber, but there’s something almost enigmatic about Wiseau’s choice of title in that there is probably a hack metaphor hiding in there somewhere. While we’ll never know what room he’s referring to, we do know that Wiseau is one of the strangest celebrities ever committed to not just film, but life itself. In interviews, q and a sessions at film screenings, and promotional junkets promoting “The Disaster Artist”, Wiseau comes across as a type of Andy Warhol on steroids, an alien visiting our planet earth who has studied us through filters of filters.
Through his hazy obscura Wiseau developed a perspective here that he communicates (poorly) through his writing (the nonsensical dialogue of which he can’t remember as the principal star), directing (scenes drag on with no rhythm, actors wander in and out of scenes at times, and continuity is discarded for a more “organic” approach), and acting (his bizarre accent is only the tip of a meat iceberg that struggles to perform through scenes that don’t make sense). Whatever his intentions, it’s clear that while Wiseau does not understand human behaviour, he has been hurt badly by the humans that he slavishly mimics.
There is a deep equal opportunity rage bubbling beneath Wiseau’s oddly aged face. Crouched underneath his histrionics, lies a child-like hurt at how girlfriends and best friends will hurt you, no matter how much you try to be a good person (and how much nagging mother-in-laws give good advice). That’s the real story behind “The Room”, and Wiseau has wisely hidden behind both his sunglasses and his “I meant to do that” stance instead of bringing to light how badly the purposely vague immigrant with possible money laundering financing is internally damaged.
Wiseau has intoned that he not only meant for “The Room” to be a comedy, but also a great sexy and dramatic film, but he seems to be the only one who thinks so. His co-star, Greg Sestero, who wrote about his experiences meeting Wiseau at their acting class and as a co-worker in “The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made”, detailed Wiseau’s bizarre choices (mounting 2 cameras, 1 standard and 1 HD, on each other- leading to focus issues, firing and re-hiring the entire cast, using unnecessary green screens, and claiming he spent $6 Million on the grubby production).
It’s tough to love “The Room”. While it’s ineptitude is spectacular and laugh out loud inducing, and the legends about it’s creation fascinating- it’s rage filled emotional lack of safety makes me pine for some breathing room.


Rating:
3.5/5



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