<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet type="text/css" media="screen" href="http://s2.wp.com/wp-content/themes/vip/newyorkobserver/stylesheets/rss.css"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	xmlns:georss="http://www.georss.org/georss" xmlns:geo="http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/wgs84_pos#" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Observer &#187; On The Town With Rex Reed</title>
	<atom:link href="http://observer.com/2001/11/on-the-town-with-rex-reed-2/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://observer.com</link>
	<description></description>
	<lastBuildDate>Tue, 21 May 2013 12:12:35 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language></language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.com/</generator>
<cloud domain='observer.com' port='80' path='/?rsscloud=notify' registerProcedure='' protocol='http-post' />
<image>
		<url>http://1.gravatar.com/blavatar/dac0f3722a48a53be75eb06c0c4f5119?s=96&#038;d=http%3A%2F%2Fs2.wp.com%2Fi%2Fbuttonw-com.png</url>
		<title>Observer &#187; On The Town With Rex Reed</title>
		<link>http://observer.com</link>
	</image>
	<atom:link rel="search" type="application/opensearchdescription+xml" href="http://observer.com/osd.xml" title="Observer" />
	<atom:link rel='hub' href='http://observer.com/?pushpress=hub'/>
		<item>
				
		<title>On The Town With Rex Reed</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/11/on-the-town-with-rex-reed-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Nov 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/11/on-the-town-with-rex-reed-2/</link>
			<dc:creator>NYO Staff</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2001/11/on-the-town-with-rex-reed-2/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>She's Fat, But Not Funny </p>
<p>Gwyneth Paltrow</p>
<p>is rumored to have made $10 million for her</p>
<p>role in the Farrelly</p>
<p>Brothers' new obesity farce, Shallow Hal .</p>
<p>I certainly hope so. It really is the only acceptable explanation for the</p>
<p>appearance of a patrician Oscar winner of her stature in such a sophomoric</p>
<p>piece of trash. For Shakespeare in Love ,</p>
<p>she probably got carfare. For 10 big ones, a girl can be forgiven almost</p>
<p>anything; for 10 big ones, there is no such thing as deplorable.</p>
<p> Too bad the same thing cannot be said for Shallow Hal . Writers-directors Bobby and Peter Farrelly</p>
<p>are the envelope-pushing amateurs whose stomach-turning junk films, such as Dumb and Dumber and There's Something About Mary , are to the</p>
<p>cinematic experience what four pounds of tainted pork are to the alimentary</p>
<p>canal. This time they examine the tired axiom "Beauty is in the eye of the</p>
<p>beholder." In the opening scene, a man dying in an intensive-care unit leaves</p>
<p>his porcine 9-year-old son Hal with parting words of sage advice: "Don't settle</p>
<p>in life for average poontang-hot tail is what it's</p>
<p>all about." The little porker grows up to be a fat gnat head, played by</p>
<p>somebody named Jack Black, who exhibits all the charm of a recycled Goodyear</p>
<p>tire. Hal is so shallow, he devotes his life to</p>
<p>hitting on girls because of the size of their bodacious ta-tas.</p>
<p>To alter his misguided libido, a self-help guru in size-16 shoes hypnotizes him</p>
<p>in a stalled elevator. From that moment on, Hal encounters the world's most</p>
<p>grotesquely hideous women and sees only beauty.</p>
<p> Enter Gwyneth</p>
<p>Paltrow, who plays Rosemary, the humongous daughter</p>
<p>of Hal's boss, played-for no reason-like a thug with a Scottish Highlands</p>
<p>accent by veteran movie mobster Joe Viterelli. When</p>
<p>Hal is with Rosemary, Ms. Paltrow's the golden-haired</p>
<p>babe we all know and love. When everyone else sees her, she's a 300-pound</p>
<p>female rhino. Even Hal's best friend (Jason Alexander), a fat cretin who sprays</p>
<p>fertilizer on his head to make it look like he has more hair, thinks he's</p>
<p>dating her to win over the boss, adding that all the women Hal is suddenly</p>
<p>attracting are dogs. "Who says they're ugly?" "Bausch and</p>
<p>Lomb."</p>
<p> This is a one-joke movie</p>
<p>dragged out for two painful hours, interrupted occasionally by Mr. Alexander,</p>
<p>who urges people to enter the bathroom to inspect the contents of the toilet</p>
<p>bowl. Then the humor turns from nasty to ghoulish when the guru removes the</p>
<p>hex, and Hal sees the women of his masturbatory fantasies for what they really</p>
<p>are and goes schizo. Not only is Rosemary a clunking</p>
<p>blob of varicose-veined ectoplasm, but the beautiful children in the pediatric</p>
<p>ward where Rosemary works turn out to be deformed burn victims, and the</p>
<p>athletic hunk Hal is jealous of turns out to have a head full of psoriasis that</p>
<p>covers his shoulders with skin scabs. In time, the shallow guy realizes beauty</p>
<p>really is only skin-deep, but it's too late for messages or morals. The humor</p>
<p>has already leaked like slow flatulence from a movie that was, from the</p>
<p>beginning, desperately in need of a bottle of Beano.</p>
<p> The sight of glam-goddess Gwyneth</p>
<p>wolfing down cheeseburgers and chocolate malts has a mildly humorous effect,</p>
<p>but once she's slathered in latex prosthetics, the sight of all that</p>
<p>pulchritude is oddly, disingenuously unfunny. I didn't crack a smile at the</p>
<p>burn victims, or the poor creature with the deformed spine who</p>
<p>crawls around on his hands and knees, either. And while this movie pretends to</p>
<p>lift the veil on the superficial values of horny men in society who make fun of</p>
<p>homely females, its attitudes toward the afflicted and disenfranchised are</p>
<p>offensively cruel. Everything about it is superficial, including Mr.</p>
<p>Alexander's coming to grips with an extended vestigial bone at the bottom of</p>
<p>his own spine, which he learns to wag proudly like a puppy dog's tail.</p>
<p> The Farrellys, who peddle bad taste on a massive scale to appeal to the basest instincts</p>
<p>of a brainless teenage audience that laughs uproariously at laxatives, and</p>
<p>semen for hair gel, call this their "most emotional film" to date. This is the</p>
<p>most genuine laugh connected with Shallow</p>
<p>Hal . It is shallow to the core, and crammed with 29 vomit-inducing rock</p>
<p>songs strung together for a soundtrack CD to prove it.</p>
<p> The Score Times</p>
<p>Two</p>
<p> Another Oscar winner goes slumming in Heist . This time it's Gene Hackman, in a</p>
<p>movie with a one-word title that pretty much says it all. This one comes on the</p>
<p>heels of The Score , with practically</p>
<p>the same identical plot. It's the old cliché about the crafty veteran thief who</p>
<p>gets betrayed by the ambitious, greedy, smartass</p>
<p>younger thief in one last heist before retirement. This time Mr. Hackman plays the older thief that Robert De Niro played in The</p>
<p>Score ; the brilliant Sam Rockwell takes on the role Edward Norton had in</p>
<p>the earlier film; and toadstool-sized Danny DeVito is</p>
<p>the crooked fence Marlon Brando</p>
<p>played in the style of Truman Capote. The</p>
<p>only difference is that Heist</p>
<p>has two heists for the price of one, neither of them plausible or convincing,</p>
<p>and the preposterous, self-conscious dialogue is written by the dumbfoundingly overrated David Mamet.</p>
<p>But even with lines like "She could talk her way out of a suntan," a heist is a</p>
<p>heist is a heist.</p>
<p> Mr. Hackman, who dresses up a lot of</p>
<p>bad movies these days, plays the crook who wants to retire after one final job</p>
<p>to his fishing boat in the tropics-a role that was so old it was hairy even</p>
<p>when Humphrey Bogart played it in film after film in the 1940's. After the</p>
<p>tiresome jewel heist, filmed in detail but still incoherent, the slimy little</p>
<p>fence (Mr. DeVito) cheats Mr. Hackman</p>
<p>out of his half of the precious gems-unless he pulls off one more job. The</p>
<p>second robbery involves stealing a fortune in gold from a cargo plane on the</p>
<p>tarmac in broad daylight. This one is foiled by the fence's cocky, oversexed</p>
<p>nephew (well played by the versatile Mr. Rockwell), who makes off with the gold</p>
<p>and the old guy's hard-boiled wife (Rebecca Pidgeon).</p>
<p>Relax. Even in the big shootout, Mr. Hackman has a</p>
<p>backup plan. Like The Score , the</p>
<p>point of a contrived underworld potboiler like Heist is simple: You can't teach an old dog new</p>
<p>tricks, because old dogs already know every trick in the book.</p>
<p> It doesn't take long before you forget all about the dynamics and</p>
<p>start listening to the dialogue. David Mamet is not</p>
<p>half the director he and his investors think he is, but as a writer he can</p>
<p>always be relied upon for fast, funny and completely pointless dialogue-which</p>
<p>means words that are in love with themselves, and lines that exist for no other</p>
<p>purpose than to be quoted. Since the whole movie is about repartee, here are</p>
<p>some examples:</p>
<p> "He's so cool that when he goes to bed, sheep count him !"</p>
<p> "Nobody lives forever." "Frank Sinatra</p>
<p>gave it a shot."</p>
<p> "Ain't</p>
<p>you a piece of work?" "Yeah, I came all the way from China in a matchbox."</p>
<p> "He's quiet as an ant pissing on cotton."</p>
<p> "How long has he been with that girl?" "How long is a Chinaman's</p>
<p>neck?"</p>
<p> Typical Mamet-speak.</p>
<p>Tough and talky and fueled by testosterone, but hardly</p>
<p>original and ultimately pointless. I want more, but in hard times, this</p>
<p>is what passes for filmmaking.</p>
<p> Travolta's Back As Good Guy</p>
<p> John Travolta's rumpled-collie</p>
<p>sincerity carries a lot of weight in the believable, slickly made but</p>
<p>less-than-gripping thriller, Domestic</p>
<p>Disturbance . The story line is simplicity itself, the trajectory</p>
<p>straightforward, and the realistic direction by the always reliable Harold</p>
<p>Becker ( Malice, City Hall ) serves the</p>
<p>material carefully. But where is the suspense?</p>
<p> Divorced nice guy Frank</p>
<p>Morrison (Mr. Travolta), who builds old-fashioned</p>
<p>wooden boats on the coast of Maryland, becomes alarmed when his already troubled</p>
<p>12-year-old son Danny (terrific newcomer Matthew O'Leary) tells him he's</p>
<p>witnessed a murder committed by his new stepfather, Rick (Vince Vaughn). Rick</p>
<p>is a rich, nattily dressed newcomer in town whose philanthropic heroics have</p>
<p>quickly established him as a pillar of the community. Now Frank's ex-wife is</p>
<p>his new bride, with another baby on the way. But at the garden wedding, Rick</p>
<p>comes nervously unhinged when an old buddy named Ray shows up to unbalance the</p>
<p>domestic bliss. Ray is even creepier than he looks, which is no small feat</p>
<p>since he's played by Steve Buscemi, a punchy actor</p>
<p>from the James Woods sleazoid school who specializes in douche bags. Sure enough, he's an</p>
<p>old fellow inmate from Rick's secret days in prison who has arrived to</p>
<p>blackmail him. Rick murders Ray and burns his corpse in the oven of a brick</p>
<p>factory, and Danny is the accidental witness.</p>
<p> Nobody believes the kid except his dad, and Mr. Travolta finds himself in his most sympathetic role since Phenomenon . After disastrous turns in Battlefield Earth and Swordfish , it's reassuring to see him</p>
<p>play a father who has never failed his son, trapped in a world that is falling</p>
<p>apart while he tries to defend him against an entire town. Vince Vaughn is</p>
<p>equally fine as the handsome Chamber of Commerce Man of the Year who hides</p>
<p>deadly secrets behind a baby-faced grin. Production values are first-rate and</p>
<p>attention never waivers. But there is never any doubt as to how this obvious</p>
<p>domestic disturbance will turn out. The time passes entertainingly-and</p>
<p>considering the alternatives, you could waste your money in worse ways. But</p>
<p>like filling Chinese takeout, you may not remember much about it the morning</p>
<p>after. </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>She's Fat, But Not Funny </p>
<p>Gwyneth Paltrow</p>
<p>is rumored to have made $10 million for her</p>
<p>role in the Farrelly</p>
<p>Brothers' new obesity farce, Shallow Hal .</p>
<p>I certainly hope so. It really is the only acceptable explanation for the</p>
<p>appearance of a patrician Oscar winner of her stature in such a sophomoric</p>
<p>piece of trash. For Shakespeare in Love ,</p>
<p>she probably got carfare. For 10 big ones, a girl can be forgiven almost</p>
<p>anything; for 10 big ones, there is no such thing as deplorable.</p>
<p> Too bad the same thing cannot be said for Shallow Hal . Writers-directors Bobby and Peter Farrelly</p>
<p>are the envelope-pushing amateurs whose stomach-turning junk films, such as Dumb and Dumber and There's Something About Mary , are to the</p>
<p>cinematic experience what four pounds of tainted pork are to the alimentary</p>
<p>canal. This time they examine the tired axiom "Beauty is in the eye of the</p>
<p>beholder." In the opening scene, a man dying in an intensive-care unit leaves</p>
<p>his porcine 9-year-old son Hal with parting words of sage advice: "Don't settle</p>
<p>in life for average poontang-hot tail is what it's</p>
<p>all about." The little porker grows up to be a fat gnat head, played by</p>
<p>somebody named Jack Black, who exhibits all the charm of a recycled Goodyear</p>
<p>tire. Hal is so shallow, he devotes his life to</p>
<p>hitting on girls because of the size of their bodacious ta-tas.</p>
<p>To alter his misguided libido, a self-help guru in size-16 shoes hypnotizes him</p>
<p>in a stalled elevator. From that moment on, Hal encounters the world's most</p>
<p>grotesquely hideous women and sees only beauty.</p>
<p> Enter Gwyneth</p>
<p>Paltrow, who plays Rosemary, the humongous daughter</p>
<p>of Hal's boss, played-for no reason-like a thug with a Scottish Highlands</p>
<p>accent by veteran movie mobster Joe Viterelli. When</p>
<p>Hal is with Rosemary, Ms. Paltrow's the golden-haired</p>
<p>babe we all know and love. When everyone else sees her, she's a 300-pound</p>
<p>female rhino. Even Hal's best friend (Jason Alexander), a fat cretin who sprays</p>
<p>fertilizer on his head to make it look like he has more hair, thinks he's</p>
<p>dating her to win over the boss, adding that all the women Hal is suddenly</p>
<p>attracting are dogs. "Who says they're ugly?" "Bausch and</p>
<p>Lomb."</p>
<p> This is a one-joke movie</p>
<p>dragged out for two painful hours, interrupted occasionally by Mr. Alexander,</p>
<p>who urges people to enter the bathroom to inspect the contents of the toilet</p>
<p>bowl. Then the humor turns from nasty to ghoulish when the guru removes the</p>
<p>hex, and Hal sees the women of his masturbatory fantasies for what they really</p>
<p>are and goes schizo. Not only is Rosemary a clunking</p>
<p>blob of varicose-veined ectoplasm, but the beautiful children in the pediatric</p>
<p>ward where Rosemary works turn out to be deformed burn victims, and the</p>
<p>athletic hunk Hal is jealous of turns out to have a head full of psoriasis that</p>
<p>covers his shoulders with skin scabs. In time, the shallow guy realizes beauty</p>
<p>really is only skin-deep, but it's too late for messages or morals. The humor</p>
<p>has already leaked like slow flatulence from a movie that was, from the</p>
<p>beginning, desperately in need of a bottle of Beano.</p>
<p> The sight of glam-goddess Gwyneth</p>
<p>wolfing down cheeseburgers and chocolate malts has a mildly humorous effect,</p>
<p>but once she's slathered in latex prosthetics, the sight of all that</p>
<p>pulchritude is oddly, disingenuously unfunny. I didn't crack a smile at the</p>
<p>burn victims, or the poor creature with the deformed spine who</p>
<p>crawls around on his hands and knees, either. And while this movie pretends to</p>
<p>lift the veil on the superficial values of horny men in society who make fun of</p>
<p>homely females, its attitudes toward the afflicted and disenfranchised are</p>
<p>offensively cruel. Everything about it is superficial, including Mr.</p>
<p>Alexander's coming to grips with an extended vestigial bone at the bottom of</p>
<p>his own spine, which he learns to wag proudly like a puppy dog's tail.</p>
<p> The Farrellys, who peddle bad taste on a massive scale to appeal to the basest instincts</p>
<p>of a brainless teenage audience that laughs uproariously at laxatives, and</p>
<p>semen for hair gel, call this their "most emotional film" to date. This is the</p>
<p>most genuine laugh connected with Shallow</p>
<p>Hal . It is shallow to the core, and crammed with 29 vomit-inducing rock</p>
<p>songs strung together for a soundtrack CD to prove it.</p>
<p> The Score Times</p>
<p>Two</p>
<p> Another Oscar winner goes slumming in Heist . This time it's Gene Hackman, in a</p>
<p>movie with a one-word title that pretty much says it all. This one comes on the</p>
<p>heels of The Score , with practically</p>
<p>the same identical plot. It's the old cliché about the crafty veteran thief who</p>
<p>gets betrayed by the ambitious, greedy, smartass</p>
<p>younger thief in one last heist before retirement. This time Mr. Hackman plays the older thief that Robert De Niro played in The</p>
<p>Score ; the brilliant Sam Rockwell takes on the role Edward Norton had in</p>
<p>the earlier film; and toadstool-sized Danny DeVito is</p>
<p>the crooked fence Marlon Brando</p>
<p>played in the style of Truman Capote. The</p>
<p>only difference is that Heist</p>
<p>has two heists for the price of one, neither of them plausible or convincing,</p>
<p>and the preposterous, self-conscious dialogue is written by the dumbfoundingly overrated David Mamet.</p>
<p>But even with lines like "She could talk her way out of a suntan," a heist is a</p>
<p>heist is a heist.</p>
<p> Mr. Hackman, who dresses up a lot of</p>
<p>bad movies these days, plays the crook who wants to retire after one final job</p>
<p>to his fishing boat in the tropics-a role that was so old it was hairy even</p>
<p>when Humphrey Bogart played it in film after film in the 1940's. After the</p>
<p>tiresome jewel heist, filmed in detail but still incoherent, the slimy little</p>
<p>fence (Mr. DeVito) cheats Mr. Hackman</p>
<p>out of his half of the precious gems-unless he pulls off one more job. The</p>
<p>second robbery involves stealing a fortune in gold from a cargo plane on the</p>
<p>tarmac in broad daylight. This one is foiled by the fence's cocky, oversexed</p>
<p>nephew (well played by the versatile Mr. Rockwell), who makes off with the gold</p>
<p>and the old guy's hard-boiled wife (Rebecca Pidgeon).</p>
<p>Relax. Even in the big shootout, Mr. Hackman has a</p>
<p>backup plan. Like The Score , the</p>
<p>point of a contrived underworld potboiler like Heist is simple: You can't teach an old dog new</p>
<p>tricks, because old dogs already know every trick in the book.</p>
<p> It doesn't take long before you forget all about the dynamics and</p>
<p>start listening to the dialogue. David Mamet is not</p>
<p>half the director he and his investors think he is, but as a writer he can</p>
<p>always be relied upon for fast, funny and completely pointless dialogue-which</p>
<p>means words that are in love with themselves, and lines that exist for no other</p>
<p>purpose than to be quoted. Since the whole movie is about repartee, here are</p>
<p>some examples:</p>
<p> "He's so cool that when he goes to bed, sheep count him !"</p>
<p> "Nobody lives forever." "Frank Sinatra</p>
<p>gave it a shot."</p>
<p> "Ain't</p>
<p>you a piece of work?" "Yeah, I came all the way from China in a matchbox."</p>
<p> "He's quiet as an ant pissing on cotton."</p>
<p> "How long has he been with that girl?" "How long is a Chinaman's</p>
<p>neck?"</p>
<p> Typical Mamet-speak.</p>
<p>Tough and talky and fueled by testosterone, but hardly</p>
<p>original and ultimately pointless. I want more, but in hard times, this</p>
<p>is what passes for filmmaking.</p>
<p> Travolta's Back As Good Guy</p>
<p> John Travolta's rumpled-collie</p>
<p>sincerity carries a lot of weight in the believable, slickly made but</p>
<p>less-than-gripping thriller, Domestic</p>
<p>Disturbance . The story line is simplicity itself, the trajectory</p>
<p>straightforward, and the realistic direction by the always reliable Harold</p>
<p>Becker ( Malice, City Hall ) serves the</p>
<p>material carefully. But where is the suspense?</p>
<p> Divorced nice guy Frank</p>
<p>Morrison (Mr. Travolta), who builds old-fashioned</p>
<p>wooden boats on the coast of Maryland, becomes alarmed when his already troubled</p>
<p>12-year-old son Danny (terrific newcomer Matthew O'Leary) tells him he's</p>
<p>witnessed a murder committed by his new stepfather, Rick (Vince Vaughn). Rick</p>
<p>is a rich, nattily dressed newcomer in town whose philanthropic heroics have</p>
<p>quickly established him as a pillar of the community. Now Frank's ex-wife is</p>
<p>his new bride, with another baby on the way. But at the garden wedding, Rick</p>
<p>comes nervously unhinged when an old buddy named Ray shows up to unbalance the</p>
<p>domestic bliss. Ray is even creepier than he looks, which is no small feat</p>
<p>since he's played by Steve Buscemi, a punchy actor</p>
<p>from the James Woods sleazoid school who specializes in douche bags. Sure enough, he's an</p>
<p>old fellow inmate from Rick's secret days in prison who has arrived to</p>
<p>blackmail him. Rick murders Ray and burns his corpse in the oven of a brick</p>
<p>factory, and Danny is the accidental witness.</p>
<p> Nobody believes the kid except his dad, and Mr. Travolta finds himself in his most sympathetic role since Phenomenon . After disastrous turns in Battlefield Earth and Swordfish , it's reassuring to see him</p>
<p>play a father who has never failed his son, trapped in a world that is falling</p>
<p>apart while he tries to defend him against an entire town. Vince Vaughn is</p>
<p>equally fine as the handsome Chamber of Commerce Man of the Year who hides</p>
<p>deadly secrets behind a baby-faced grin. Production values are first-rate and</p>
<p>attention never waivers. But there is never any doubt as to how this obvious</p>
<p>domestic disturbance will turn out. The time passes entertainingly-and</p>
<p>considering the alternatives, you could waste your money in worse ways. But</p>
<p>like filling Chinese takeout, you may not remember much about it the morning</p>
<p>after. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2001/11/on-the-town-with-rex-reed-2/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>
	</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
