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Reviews of Being John Malkovich

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Picture of Adam Suraf

Adam Suraf

19May12

You should check out Malkovich again on Criterion’s new Blu-ray, I’ve seen it numerous times now and it’s one of the most unique films I’ve ever seen, you remember the surreal concept, but kind of forget what a moving experience it is, the metaphysical ramifications of Kaufman’s masterful script, and the haunting themes of Burwell’s soundtrack. It’s disturbing, especially the final scenes, but also amazingly life affirming. And those performances from the central four actors are career bests. I’ll have to re-watch ‘Eternal Sunshine’ and ‘Adaptation’ again, which I’d suggest form a Kaufman trilogy of existential, metaphysical alt-worlds.

  • Currently 5.0/5 Stars.
Picture of Benoît

Benoît

9Oct10

C’est l’histoire d’un pauvre type paumé, chômeur, marié à une femme aimant autant les animaux que son mari. Quand il postule pour la société de Lester, l’homme comprend qu’il doit changer de vie. Attiré par une collègue de travail, cette dernière repousse constamment ses avances. Jusqu’au jour où il découvre une porte menant tout droit dans la tête de John Malkovich. Derrière ce scénario du décidément très barré Charlie Kaufman se cache avant tout des gens possédant en eux un certain malaise, ne profitant pas de la vie car celle-ci ne lui a jamais offert de cadeaux ou du moins ne se sont pas battus pour en obtenir. L’évasion à travers le cerveau de l’acteur leur permet un tant soi peu de donner un sens, sinon nouveau, actuel à leur vie. Leur redonne la joie de vivre. L’oeuvre pose aussi question de la sorte de la personnalité des acteurs, de leur implication dans les rôles qu’ils jouent dans leurs films. Hormis un scénario comportant parfois quelques légers blancs ou invraisemblances (notamment lorsque Schwartz se retrouve dans l’esprit de la fillette, est-ce toujours pas cette même porte?), Jonze bénéficie d’un casting incroyable pour un premier film (mais le cinéaste trainait déjà une réputation avant de se lancer au cinéma), d’un Carter Burwell dans une grande forme et d’une mise en scène correspondant parfaitement au script. Une franche réussite.

  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
Picture of Todd Kushigemachi

Todd Kushige​machi

25May09

(Originally written September 1, 2008)

Screenwriter Charlie Kaufman is in love with the bizarre. Whether it is the self-reflexive postmodernism of Adaptation. or the mental map of a breakup that is Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Kaufman loves to pervert conventional storytelling to tell unique stories about how people interact with their own ideas. Unfortunately, he had not quite perfected this skill when he wrote the 1999 film Being John Maklkovich.

Being John Malkovich is playful, and it has a great performance from none other than John Malcovich himself, but it lacks the human touch that makes his previously mentioned efforts so engaging. Movie characters did not get much love in 1999, the same year that American Beauty engaged moviegoers across the nation with its disdain of humanity. Both of these 1999 films have absolutely pathetic characters, and as they struggle with their circumstances, I had a difficult time caring about what happened to them. John Cusack plays the puppeteer Craig Schwartz in a way that gives the character the obsession that brings him to ruin but none of the passion that would drive him in the first place. He’s unlikable, and when he meets his ultimate fate, it’s haunting, but I really couldn’t care less.

While Kaufman would eventually learn to create surreal story elements with inherent thematic questions, he forces questions of identity and sexuality into the story of Being John Malkvovich. After Cusack and Cameron Diaz have been in the body of Malkovich, their conversations are philosophical but ultimately unrealistic. Would someone as average as these characters really be thinking so deeply about being in the body of a movie star? Kaufman already made these characters incapable of human feelings, so why would he give them such insight unless they were mere devices to inject meaning into an otherwise masturbatory exercise in art?

There are some brilliant sequences, including Diaz chasing Catherine Keener through the subconscious of Malkovich—different fragments of the subconscious blend together to create a riveting backdrop for a violent lover’s quarrel. However, there are times where Kaufman gets caught up in his own cuteness and goes a little too far with the bizarre shtick—a world full of John Malkovich clones? A scene as pathetic as the Johnny Depp hallucination in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End, Malkovich’s trip through his own mind is a disappointing. Kaufman had a chance to give people an exciting vision of what it is like to enter one’s own head, and I can’t help but think that he could have done better. That’s my key issue with this film. Being John Malkvovich is probably a much better film than I make it out to be, but Kaufman would go on to write absolute masterpieces, and I could not diminish their significance by being uncritical of this film that is little more than a stepping stone to greater things.

  • Currently 3.0/5 Stars.