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| Please forgive me if I act a little strange For I know not what I do. Feels like lightning running through my veins Every time I look at you. --David Gray, "Please Forgive Me" (White Ladder) |
In The Kid Stays in the Picture, Robert Evans reveals
how, with his job as Paramount studio head on the chopping block, he cobbled together a
thirty-minute trailer spotlighting the studios recent hits (Rosemarys
Baby, Love
Story) and anticipated blockbusters, (The Godfather) thereby saving his skin. The new
television series, Out of Order, has that same feeling, that Showtime itself,
long-dwarfed by HBOs powerhouse roster of series (Sopranos, Six Feet Under),
is at last trying to steal home.
Billed by Showtime as a "limited series," Out of Order
has an enviable ensemble cast and a maturity that is generally absent from the broadcast
spectrum. Series creators Wayne and Donna Powers, veterans of screen and matrimony, met
twenty years ago at USC film school. Out of Order assays the life and
times of the Colms, alter egos of the Powers. As Mark and Lorna Colms, Eric Stoltz and
Felicity Huffman are a screenwriting couple in the midst of professional and conjugal
flux, hastened by Lorna Colms clinical depression.
Each character is far from household saint, practicing the sins of
omission, but thanks to their onscreen chemistry and ear-to-the-heart dialogue,
theres an immediate sense that their love isnt Hollywood ephemeral. Mark is a
paragon, as soccer mom and designee PTA parent, save for his roving eye. Since reaching
stardom in Peter Bogdanovichs Mask,
Stoltz has made a career out of finding the insouciance in the most disposable of cads
(most recently in House of Mirth).
Here he is an earnest husband whose fallibility principally impulses of reckless
infidelity is a function of his wifes black despair. Make no mistake, this is
no Mind of the Married Man (to invoke an HBO misfire). While Married Mans
protagonist Mickey is infantile (even his name bespeaks arrested development), Mark Colm
is the standard bearer of the couples reputation as he tries to appease Zack, their
enigmatic producer (Bogdanovich, moonlighting from his Sopranos gig).
Lorna herself has checked out of both their livelihood and their lives.
She hides under their Frette sheets when not performing in a
team-tag shame spiral with Steve (William H. Macy, her off-screen husband), a producer who
finds himself in "movie jail" for a Fox project gone south. Instead of tea and
sympathy, he offers Lorna dope and highballs. In the series opener, Lorna is in the midst
of beating back denial. Her plaintive bleat to husband Mark, "Im fucking up. I
am a fuck up," signals an unflinching study in depression. Yet, you bet on her to
rise like a Phoenix, even as you see her trying to remove the half-dollars from her
eyelids as she climbs back from the abyss. When she tries to explain her state of mind to
her husband, she is riveting: "Its agony. Every fucking minute is agony.
fall into a black hole and never come out."
Together the Colms have accumulated quite the life mortgage
a Mercedes convertible, their own Hearst Castle, a kid who plays goalie against
Spielbergs progeny. What lies beyond the moat is a surfeit of melancholy. We see
temptation, material and erotic, as well as the banal. For the first time in the
Colms long marriage, Mark is fielding propositions (a no-strings handjob from a very
jaded Justine Bateman) and hes fantasizing what it would be like to have an
uncomplicated tryst with belly-ringed Danni (a sinuous Kim Dickins last seen in Allison
Anders Things Behind the Sun).
Much in the spirit of the beloved series Dream On (itself
inspired by Danny Kayes Secret
Life of Walter Mitty), Mark unspools his life as though it were a film. When the
Colms visit Lornas family for Thanksgiving, Lornas revelations of
familial abuse straight out of Thomas Vinterbergs Dogma film The Celebrationare
intercut with a reenactment of Raging Bull.
While the dialogue is sharp as a Ginzu, it is long on speeches, not
taking full advantage of the rapport Stoltz and Huffman have effortlessly established.
Instead, the script falls back on anthropomorphizing flora (rhododendron) and fauna
(assorted family pets), as if Mark needs a foil to jolt him into the realization that
"were still here you and I." This is a line intended for Lorna, not Shaq
#8, his sons imperishable goldfish.
Advised by a sardonic Bogdanovich ("I love making pictures;
its all I love") that the use of heroin in their script isnt up
to the minute, Mark opts for Ecstasy as drug du jour. Disciples of the axiom
"write what you know," the couple decides to hold a bacchanal so that they might
trip the light fantastic with friends and family. During the party Mark and Danni cross
the Platonic line while skinny-dipping in the Colms heated swimming pool. The scene,
captured during the first days shooting, just might be the pilots most
poignant interlude. In the underwater moonlight Dickens is a shimmering half-life and the
pairs infidelity feels truly spontaneous and evanescent.
While hardly a virgin look at Hollywood, its evident that the
Powers arent in it to bite the hand that feeds them. Southern California, with its
placid decadence and suburban sprawl, is merely a backdrop. While the ninety-minute pilot
for Out of Order runs a tad overlong, and much of the narrative duplicates rather
than comments on onscreen action, it does whet the appetite for more. Just as David
Grays "Please Forgive Me," opens the series, Verves anthem, "I
Can Change" rounds out the opener, as each of the cast breaks the fourth wall, Paul
Thomas Anderson-style, proclaiming, "Im guilty of being human." More
liberal doses of nuance, and, as called for, more daring flights of fancy would help the
series realize its potential. Even while dilated, Out of Order is a clear-eyed and
sophisticated alternative to MTV-demographics. Its characters have been around the block
and they have stories to tell.
-
Jerry Weinstein