Saturday, 6 January 2018

Boogie Nights


1997’s “Boogie Nights“, written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.

Starring Mark Wahlberg, Burt Reynolds, Julianne Moore, John C. Reilly, William H. Macy, Heather Graham, Don Cheadle, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Luis Guzman, Jack Wallace, Thomas Jane, Philip Baker Hall, and Ricky Jay.
Nominated for an Academy Award for Best Screenplay (Paul Thomas Anderson), Best Supporting Actress (Julianne Moore), and Best Supporting Actor (Burt Reynolds).

What is it about?

During 1977, high school aged dishwasher Mark Wahlberg is working at a club one night when he meets pornographer, Burt Reynolds. With Wahlberg on the outs from his shrill mother and indifferent father, Reynolds becomes a surrogate father figure to him and introduces Walhberg into his de facto family of adult film creators. From matriarch (Julianne Moore) to brother in arms (John C. Reilly) to sister figure (Heather Graham) to fellow actor (Luis Guzman) to sound man (Philip Seymour Hoffman) to 2nd Director (William H. Macy) to camera man (Ricky Jay) to financer (Jack Wallace), all of them figure into Wahlberg’s journey from a dishwasher to a pornography star to something else entirely. As the 70’s good times ebb into the more difficult 80’s, film transitions into video, and the positive vibes start to peter out, will Wahlberg be able to regain his mojo?

Why is it worth seeing?

Even though Paul Thomas Anderson’ s debut feature was 1996’s “Hard Eight”, “Boogie Nights” is really his coming out party. Packed with stars giving career invigorating (and revitalizing) performances, Anderson apes such icons such as Scorcese, De Palma, and Tarantino, but also crafts an immersive family drama- where none of the characters are related and every member has to come to grips with their respective traumas.
It’s easy to condemn the subject matter depicted here. This is a movie about the pornography industry through the 70’s and 80’s, and to some, hardly something worth celebrating. Not surprisingly, the characters have freewheeling lifestyles, and rather liberal attitudes about their behaviours in a society just beginning to discover video tape and the war on drugs. But a little insight reveals that our hero’s journey is the very definition of wayward, and that the surrogate family here is the stuff the “Fast and Furiousfranchise claims to be made out of.
This may be Reynold’s most fully realized role, as his patriarchal porn director who deeply cares for his cast and just wants to make art, sets the table for some serious utopian ideals that may not hold up to society (Reynolds, brought back to life from career hell by Anderson, allegedly feuded with the director at times, and pissed away any good will that he generated here, fading back to VOD obscurity shortly after). Wahlberg is fantastic too, portraying the teenager/young adult as a combination of simple earnestness and a growing confidence in himself and his ahem, talent, that boils to a head. As his career advanced from an underwear model, it’s a place Wahlberg seems to have forgotten as he’s tried to present himself as a confident A lister- an awkward fit at times.
It would be easy to label “Boogie Nights” as a comedy. Some of it’s inspired scenes about the creation of Wahlberg’s pseudonym, Reynold’s detachment about his colleague’s professional choices, or it’s digs at dated technology and lifestyles, are a riot. But Anderson’s true strength is in his depiction of relationships, something that he is just exploring in this phase of his career, before going on to create masterpieces such as “The Master” and “There Will be Blood”, as well as “Magnolia”. Like any young and exciting filmmaker, Anderson does a fine job of copying masters before him, but some of the motivations that inspire characters to make their choices, or the characters themselves, can feel a little unnatural (Wahlberg’s parents for example). And watching a character make a choice during a hold up gone up wrong could have ended in a lot more ambiguity for increased potency.
Equal parts propulsive and hilarious, “Boogie Nights”’ feelings on being a bright star in a universe full of them fortunately remind us that in a weird and exciting world, sometimes family is all you’ve got.


Rating:

4/5




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