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	<title>Observer &#187; Scorsese, Schrader&#8217;s Ambulance Driver … Hee Haw Goes Hollywood</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Scorsese, Schrader&#8217;s Ambulance Driver … Hee Haw Goes Hollywood</title>
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		<title>Scorsese, Schrader&#8217;s Ambulance Driver … Hee Haw Goes Hollywood</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/1999/10/scorsese-schraders-ambulance-driver-hee-haw-goes-hollywood/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Oct 1999 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/1999/10/scorsese-schraders-ambulance-driver-hee-haw-goes-hollywood/</link>
			<dc:creator>Rex Reed</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Scorsese, Schrader's</p>
<p>Ambulance Driver</p>
<p> Just when we thought it was safe to return to the streets of</p>
<p>New York at night, director Martin Scorsese and screenwriter Paul Schrader, the</p>
<p>duo that sandblasted their way through Taxi</p>
<p>Driver 23 years ago, are psyched and ready to scare the living crap out of</p>
<p>us all over again. Bringing Out the Dead</p>
<p>takes us reluctantly back to the pre-Giuliani days when Manhattan's West Side</p>
<p>was Tombstone after dark, law and order was something in a Vincente Minnelli</p>
<p>musical, and every night there was another gunfight at the O.K. Corral. Take a</p>
<p>Valium.</p>
<p> The time is the early 1990's, the setting is Hell's Kitchen,</p>
<p>and the focus is three nights in the harrowing lives of brave, burned-out,</p>
<p>overworked and underpaid paramedics played by Nicolas Cage, John Goodman, Ving</p>
<p>Rhames and Tom Sizemore. All of them walk the razor-blade edge between</p>
<p>distorted reality and total insanity, and some of them have already crossed</p>
<p>over as they make their rounds from one horror to the next. There isn't much</p>
<p>plot, and after Mr. Scorsese drags you from ambulances to emergency rooms with</p>
<p>the driving ferocity of a screaming rock-and-roll beat, you may, at the end of</p>
<p>two hours, feel the need to check into Bellevue yourself. Still, this is a</p>
<p>furiously paced, unsparingly feverish trip to hell that cannot be easily</p>
<p>dismissed or forgotten. It has the bloody, nerve-rattling impact of a mugging</p>
<p>at gunpoint.</p>
<p> Here is a landscape of junkies, pregnant hookers, burning</p>
<p>barrels in vacant lots, teen-agers dying of AIDS, women with cockroaches stuck</p>
<p>in their eardrums, drug overdoses, cardiac arrests, suicides and one tragedy</p>
<p>after another, and the paramedics on the graveyard shift are the cameras</p>
<p>through which the agony is captured. To these guys, anger, fear, despair,</p>
<p>desperation, cruelty and sleep deprivation play like job descriptions, and no</p>
<p>matter how bad it gets it always gets worse. Living on junk food, painkillers</p>
<p>and gin, the hollow-eyed Mr. Cage has finally had all the stench, blood and</p>
<p>death he can take in this hellish nocturnal nightmare. No wonder he heads for a</p>
<p>friendly, stress-free crack den himself. While he hears voices and sees ghosts</p>
<p>of the souls he's lost, Mr. Sizemore takes a more direct approach, pulverizing</p>
<p>a hallucinatory junkie with a baseball bat and assaulting his own ambulance</p>
<p>with a crowbar. But while they spiral out of control, the movie spirals out of</p>
<p>control, too, exploding in a repellant furnace of surrealism directed with a</p>
<p>blowtorch and punctuated by poetic narration. ("My life was less about saving</p>
<p>lives and more about bearing witness," says Mr. Cage over the sirens. "I was a</p>
<p>grief mop.") New York is the main</p>
<p>character, and it's depicted as an endless corridor of human dumpsters. Well,</p>
<p>it's fascinating, but you can't say nihilism doesn't dominate.</p>
<p> It's been almost a quarter of a century since Taxi Driver . Mr. Scorsese and Mr.</p>
<p>Schrader have aged and mellowed, and so has New York. So why is their New York</p>
<p>still so graphically violent and relentlessly noxious? There are still 9</p>
<p>million stories in the naked city, but with all of the miracles witnessed by</p>
<p>people who have called for emergency ambulances, it's regretful that Bringing Out the Dead couldn't find one</p>
<p>episode about paramedics with a happy ending.</p>
<p> Based on a lurid book by Joe Connelly, a former paramedic,</p>
<p>it tells some truths, but it doesn't begin to tell the whole truth. Somewhere</p>
<p>in the vomit and madness there has got to be hope. The Scorsese-Schrader team still</p>
<p>knows how to make powerful films, and the persuasive performances and polished</p>
<p>technology don't bore, but this is not a movie for general audiences. Even if</p>
<p>you survive it, you will never dial 911 again.</p>
<p> Hee Haw Goes</p>
<p>Hollywood</p>
<p> Crazy in Alabama</p>
<p>marks the directorial debut of Latin lothario Antonio Banderas. O.K., so he</p>
<p>knows what to do with a camera. He's just turned it on the wrong movie. In this</p>
<p>curiously uneasy blend of "shucks, y'all" whimsy and social consciousness, Mrs.</p>
<p>Banderas, better known as Melanie Griffith, plays Lucille, a 34-year-old Daisy</p>
<p>Mae from a backwoods Dogpatch called Industry, Ala., who pours rat poison into</p>
<p>her husband's coffee, cuts off his head with an electric carving knife,</p>
<p>deposits her seven brats with her bewildered mother, and heads for Hollywood to</p>
<p>become a star.</p>
<p> Two parallel stories emerge. While Lucille grifts and grinds</p>
<p>her way west via New Orleans and Florida, her nephew Peejoe fights racial</p>
<p>prejudice back home in Alabama, where an evil sheriff played by Meat Loaf is terrorizing</p>
<p>the town. In Hollywood, Aunt Lucille crashes TV with the help of an unctuous</p>
<p>agent (Robert Wagner) and ends up on a segment of Bewitched , dragging her husband's severed head to the set in a hat</p>
<p>box, while back in Industry, Peejoe ends up on the cover of Look magazine. The whole thing yawns its</p>
<p>way to a finale when Aunt Lucille returns home a local celebrity to appear at</p>
<p>her own murder trial, a preposterous scene presided over by a hilarious judge</p>
<p>(Rod Steiger) right out of Petticoat Junction.</p>
<p> The cast includes the excellent David Morse, Cathy Moriarty</p>
<p>and Fannie Flagg, and rarely have so many talented people seemed so out of</p>
<p>place. Ms. Griffith looks sluttish and awful in a series of ugly black wigs,</p>
<p>nobody seems particularly well suited to the roles of Southern cornpones, and</p>
<p>the dialogue consisting of such riveting exchanges as "Gosh dawg!" and</p>
<p>"Dadgummit!" could only pass for authentic hillbilly patois to someone like Mr.</p>
<p>Banderas, whose first language, in any case, has never been English.</p>
<p> He's King of His</p>
<p>World</p>
<p> Joe the King is a</p>
<p>grueling but haunting intelligently made little film written and directed by</p>
<p>the 36-year-old actor Frank Whaley, who is probably best remembered as the</p>
<p>gullible preppy whose drug deal went wrong in Pulp Fiction and as Kevin Spacey's demonic assistant in Swimming With Sharks . Between acting</p>
<p>assignments, Mr. Whaley somehow found the time to create this remarkable</p>
<p>portrait of an impoverished teenager spiraling toward a life of crime and</p>
<p>found, among his friends, an all-star cast that shared his cinematic vision.</p>
<p>The result is a very fine film indeed. I found myself genuinely moved which, in</p>
<p>a year of silliness, is quite an accomplishment.</p>
<p> Adolescence is never easy, but for poor 14-year-old Joe</p>
<p>Henry (played with astounding maturity and focus by the excellent young actor</p>
<p>Noah Fleiss), the humiliation is downright palpable. Joe lives a life so</p>
<p>deprived and joyless he spends most of his free time in a dark crawl space</p>
<p>under the front porch of his dilapidated house on Staten Island, listening to</p>
<p>the violence inside its gloomy walls. Joe's father is the drunken janitor in</p>
<p>his school-a shiftless, irresponsible wife-beater who owes everybody in the</p>
<p>neighborhood-played without a shred of glammed-up star charisma by Val Kilmer.</p>
<p>Joe's long-suffering, hard-working mother (the excellent Karen Young) is an</p>
<p>abuse victim whose only joy in life is her old 33-r.p.m. Johnny Ray records,</p>
<p>until Dad smashes them up, too.</p>
<p> While Joe's traumatized older brother withdraws from the</p>
<p>world to sleep on the floor inside a closet, there is a survival instinct in</p>
<p>Joe that drives him to improve his situation, look for a silver lining and find</p>
<p>some dignity and humanity in his hopeless life. Tragically, he must break the</p>
<p>law to do it. Fueled by a well-intentioned but distracted guidance counselor</p>
<p>(Ethan Hawke), the boy looks for ways to alleviate the pain, turmoil and</p>
<p>indifference in his life, first by stealing from the freezer in the greasy</p>
<p>spoon where he washes dishes after school, then by breaking into school lockers,</p>
<p>and finally by robbing the cashbox to pay off his Dad's creditors and replace</p>
<p>his mother's broken phonograph records.</p>
<p> Denied even the most basic protections to which a child is</p>
<p>entitled, Joe makes up his own rules in a world where he alone is king, but the</p>
<p>only payoff is jail. Mr. Whaley is a most persuasive and compassionate</p>
<p>storyteller whose strength is never passing moral judgments. His characters</p>
<p>merely exist.</p>
<p> In the title role, young Mr. Fleiss never plays to the</p>
<p>camera like one of those self-conscious Hollywood teenagers suffering from a</p>
<p>terminal case of the cutes. He even has bags under his eyes. The sound is</p>
<p>sometimes muffled, the camerawork occasionally flat, but Mr. Whaley's script</p>
<p>and focused direction provide raw materials that more than make up for the</p>
<p>technical imperfections in a debut feature.</p>
<p> Joe the King , with</p>
<p>its harsh and relentless realism, will have to find its audience, but the</p>
<p>serendipitous pleasure you'll derive from finding it on your own will be</p>
<p>enormous.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Scorsese, Schrader's</p>
<p>Ambulance Driver</p>
<p> Just when we thought it was safe to return to the streets of</p>
<p>New York at night, director Martin Scorsese and screenwriter Paul Schrader, the</p>
<p>duo that sandblasted their way through Taxi</p>
<p>Driver 23 years ago, are psyched and ready to scare the living crap out of</p>
<p>us all over again. Bringing Out the Dead</p>
<p>takes us reluctantly back to the pre-Giuliani days when Manhattan's West Side</p>
<p>was Tombstone after dark, law and order was something in a Vincente Minnelli</p>
<p>musical, and every night there was another gunfight at the O.K. Corral. Take a</p>
<p>Valium.</p>
<p> The time is the early 1990's, the setting is Hell's Kitchen,</p>
<p>and the focus is three nights in the harrowing lives of brave, burned-out,</p>
<p>overworked and underpaid paramedics played by Nicolas Cage, John Goodman, Ving</p>
<p>Rhames and Tom Sizemore. All of them walk the razor-blade edge between</p>
<p>distorted reality and total insanity, and some of them have already crossed</p>
<p>over as they make their rounds from one horror to the next. There isn't much</p>
<p>plot, and after Mr. Scorsese drags you from ambulances to emergency rooms with</p>
<p>the driving ferocity of a screaming rock-and-roll beat, you may, at the end of</p>
<p>two hours, feel the need to check into Bellevue yourself. Still, this is a</p>
<p>furiously paced, unsparingly feverish trip to hell that cannot be easily</p>
<p>dismissed or forgotten. It has the bloody, nerve-rattling impact of a mugging</p>
<p>at gunpoint.</p>
<p> Here is a landscape of junkies, pregnant hookers, burning</p>
<p>barrels in vacant lots, teen-agers dying of AIDS, women with cockroaches stuck</p>
<p>in their eardrums, drug overdoses, cardiac arrests, suicides and one tragedy</p>
<p>after another, and the paramedics on the graveyard shift are the cameras</p>
<p>through which the agony is captured. To these guys, anger, fear, despair,</p>
<p>desperation, cruelty and sleep deprivation play like job descriptions, and no</p>
<p>matter how bad it gets it always gets worse. Living on junk food, painkillers</p>
<p>and gin, the hollow-eyed Mr. Cage has finally had all the stench, blood and</p>
<p>death he can take in this hellish nocturnal nightmare. No wonder he heads for a</p>
<p>friendly, stress-free crack den himself. While he hears voices and sees ghosts</p>
<p>of the souls he's lost, Mr. Sizemore takes a more direct approach, pulverizing</p>
<p>a hallucinatory junkie with a baseball bat and assaulting his own ambulance</p>
<p>with a crowbar. But while they spiral out of control, the movie spirals out of</p>
<p>control, too, exploding in a repellant furnace of surrealism directed with a</p>
<p>blowtorch and punctuated by poetic narration. ("My life was less about saving</p>
<p>lives and more about bearing witness," says Mr. Cage over the sirens. "I was a</p>
<p>grief mop.") New York is the main</p>
<p>character, and it's depicted as an endless corridor of human dumpsters. Well,</p>
<p>it's fascinating, but you can't say nihilism doesn't dominate.</p>
<p> It's been almost a quarter of a century since Taxi Driver . Mr. Scorsese and Mr.</p>
<p>Schrader have aged and mellowed, and so has New York. So why is their New York</p>
<p>still so graphically violent and relentlessly noxious? There are still 9</p>
<p>million stories in the naked city, but with all of the miracles witnessed by</p>
<p>people who have called for emergency ambulances, it's regretful that Bringing Out the Dead couldn't find one</p>
<p>episode about paramedics with a happy ending.</p>
<p> Based on a lurid book by Joe Connelly, a former paramedic,</p>
<p>it tells some truths, but it doesn't begin to tell the whole truth. Somewhere</p>
<p>in the vomit and madness there has got to be hope. The Scorsese-Schrader team still</p>
<p>knows how to make powerful films, and the persuasive performances and polished</p>
<p>technology don't bore, but this is not a movie for general audiences. Even if</p>
<p>you survive it, you will never dial 911 again.</p>
<p> Hee Haw Goes</p>
<p>Hollywood</p>
<p> Crazy in Alabama</p>
<p>marks the directorial debut of Latin lothario Antonio Banderas. O.K., so he</p>
<p>knows what to do with a camera. He's just turned it on the wrong movie. In this</p>
<p>curiously uneasy blend of "shucks, y'all" whimsy and social consciousness, Mrs.</p>
<p>Banderas, better known as Melanie Griffith, plays Lucille, a 34-year-old Daisy</p>
<p>Mae from a backwoods Dogpatch called Industry, Ala., who pours rat poison into</p>
<p>her husband's coffee, cuts off his head with an electric carving knife,</p>
<p>deposits her seven brats with her bewildered mother, and heads for Hollywood to</p>
<p>become a star.</p>
<p> Two parallel stories emerge. While Lucille grifts and grinds</p>
<p>her way west via New Orleans and Florida, her nephew Peejoe fights racial</p>
<p>prejudice back home in Alabama, where an evil sheriff played by Meat Loaf is terrorizing</p>
<p>the town. In Hollywood, Aunt Lucille crashes TV with the help of an unctuous</p>
<p>agent (Robert Wagner) and ends up on a segment of Bewitched , dragging her husband's severed head to the set in a hat</p>
<p>box, while back in Industry, Peejoe ends up on the cover of Look magazine. The whole thing yawns its</p>
<p>way to a finale when Aunt Lucille returns home a local celebrity to appear at</p>
<p>her own murder trial, a preposterous scene presided over by a hilarious judge</p>
<p>(Rod Steiger) right out of Petticoat Junction.</p>
<p> The cast includes the excellent David Morse, Cathy Moriarty</p>
<p>and Fannie Flagg, and rarely have so many talented people seemed so out of</p>
<p>place. Ms. Griffith looks sluttish and awful in a series of ugly black wigs,</p>
<p>nobody seems particularly well suited to the roles of Southern cornpones, and</p>
<p>the dialogue consisting of such riveting exchanges as "Gosh dawg!" and</p>
<p>"Dadgummit!" could only pass for authentic hillbilly patois to someone like Mr.</p>
<p>Banderas, whose first language, in any case, has never been English.</p>
<p> He's King of His</p>
<p>World</p>
<p> Joe the King is a</p>
<p>grueling but haunting intelligently made little film written and directed by</p>
<p>the 36-year-old actor Frank Whaley, who is probably best remembered as the</p>
<p>gullible preppy whose drug deal went wrong in Pulp Fiction and as Kevin Spacey's demonic assistant in Swimming With Sharks . Between acting</p>
<p>assignments, Mr. Whaley somehow found the time to create this remarkable</p>
<p>portrait of an impoverished teenager spiraling toward a life of crime and</p>
<p>found, among his friends, an all-star cast that shared his cinematic vision.</p>
<p>The result is a very fine film indeed. I found myself genuinely moved which, in</p>
<p>a year of silliness, is quite an accomplishment.</p>
<p> Adolescence is never easy, but for poor 14-year-old Joe</p>
<p>Henry (played with astounding maturity and focus by the excellent young actor</p>
<p>Noah Fleiss), the humiliation is downright palpable. Joe lives a life so</p>
<p>deprived and joyless he spends most of his free time in a dark crawl space</p>
<p>under the front porch of his dilapidated house on Staten Island, listening to</p>
<p>the violence inside its gloomy walls. Joe's father is the drunken janitor in</p>
<p>his school-a shiftless, irresponsible wife-beater who owes everybody in the</p>
<p>neighborhood-played without a shred of glammed-up star charisma by Val Kilmer.</p>
<p>Joe's long-suffering, hard-working mother (the excellent Karen Young) is an</p>
<p>abuse victim whose only joy in life is her old 33-r.p.m. Johnny Ray records,</p>
<p>until Dad smashes them up, too.</p>
<p> While Joe's traumatized older brother withdraws from the</p>
<p>world to sleep on the floor inside a closet, there is a survival instinct in</p>
<p>Joe that drives him to improve his situation, look for a silver lining and find</p>
<p>some dignity and humanity in his hopeless life. Tragically, he must break the</p>
<p>law to do it. Fueled by a well-intentioned but distracted guidance counselor</p>
<p>(Ethan Hawke), the boy looks for ways to alleviate the pain, turmoil and</p>
<p>indifference in his life, first by stealing from the freezer in the greasy</p>
<p>spoon where he washes dishes after school, then by breaking into school lockers,</p>
<p>and finally by robbing the cashbox to pay off his Dad's creditors and replace</p>
<p>his mother's broken phonograph records.</p>
<p> Denied even the most basic protections to which a child is</p>
<p>entitled, Joe makes up his own rules in a world where he alone is king, but the</p>
<p>only payoff is jail. Mr. Whaley is a most persuasive and compassionate</p>
<p>storyteller whose strength is never passing moral judgments. His characters</p>
<p>merely exist.</p>
<p> In the title role, young Mr. Fleiss never plays to the</p>
<p>camera like one of those self-conscious Hollywood teenagers suffering from a</p>
<p>terminal case of the cutes. He even has bags under his eyes. The sound is</p>
<p>sometimes muffled, the camerawork occasionally flat, but Mr. Whaley's script</p>
<p>and focused direction provide raw materials that more than make up for the</p>
<p>technical imperfections in a debut feature.</p>
<p> Joe the King , with</p>
<p>its harsh and relentless realism, will have to find its audience, but the</p>
<p>serendipitous pleasure you'll derive from finding it on your own will be</p>
<p>enormous.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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