A Loving Tribute to Bad Cinema
By Randy Anderson
How does one describe Tim Burton’s film "Ed
Wood?" Is it a documentary on the infamous director’s
life, a comedy, or a vehicle for some great acting? Happily it succeeds on all
three counts. For those of you who don’t know who Ed Wood is, he is a
Hollywood legend. Careers have been made panning his films, some calling them
the worst ever made. And yet movie fans are still enjoying them. Why? Ed made
these films with little time and no money, but there is that weird passion,
that strange honesty that pervades his work; that is Ed Wood’s saving grace.
Sometimes you get what you wish for. One week before I was handed the
new DVD of "Ed Wood" by Cinema Tuesdays' Nathan Cone, my wife
and I were lamenting the fact this Tim Burton film was still not available
on disc. Well, the wait is over. The movie stars Johnny Depp in the title
role. His friendly, bouncy and ever optimist outer demeanor hides a man
with the doubts we all have, and a fetish for women’s clothing. While
Burton plays up the transvestitism, having Depp directing in drag,
something the original never did, he treats the subject as a matter of
fact. The real Wood hit the beaches of Normandy wearing woman’s
undergarments under his uniform. He was not so afraid of dying as he was
of being wounded and the medics finding out his secret.
"Ed Wood" covers the relationship between Wood and Bela
Lugosi, once world-famous for his portrayal of Dracula, now a broken-down
has-been. Martin Landau gives an Academy Award®-winning performance as
the tired old man given a last chance by the struggling filmmaker. This
film in fact won two Oscars®, the second for the outstanding make-up that
turned Mr. Landau into Lugosi. Filmed in glorious Black and White,
director Burton’s direct and unaffected manner echoes the working habits
of this film’s namesake and whisks us back to Ed Wood’s tinsel town.
For years I had been hearing about Johnny Depp from women of a certain
age. A slow kind of ecstasy comes over their face as if they were
describing a dessert that is no longer available on this planet. I better
understood Depp’s appeal after viewing this film. In an age were so many
actors play themselves endlessly, Depp disappears into his character. The
naturalness and totality of the transformation is haunting. The cast here
is perfect, giving us viewers an insight into that strange but functional
family that Wood surrounded himself with: the prognosticator Criswell, the
Swedish wrestler Tor Johnson, who went on to make many more B movie
classics, and Vampira, Morticia Addams come to life, with a 19-inch waist!
No one had ever come up with such an odd gaggle of underdogs before, and
we root for their slim shot at success with Wood’s films.
It is their love of the myth of Hollywood that keeps them and Wood
going. Why does this story resonate? It might be that Ed Wood lived the
creative Hollywood existence we secretly wish for ourselves. He is not a
genius, not rich, not well connected, and yet his movies are still being
enjoyed nearly fifty years after they were hastily cobbled together. His
energy, optimism, and joy of film making kept him and his family of
misfits going. Ed Wood was about living the Hollywood dream and not the
overpowering business reality that inspires no one.
Tim Burton regulars Jeffrey Jones, and Sarah Jessica Parker are
terrific, as is Bill Murray as Bunny Breckinridge. Howard Shore’s campy
cocktail hour score is fun and adds to the nostalgia. The "Ed
Wood" Special Edition disc contains deleted scenes and
all the extras we movie lovers appreciate. The only odd thing was this
disc insisted on playing with sub-titles on my machine and it was a pain
to turn them off. Highly recommended - rated R. This is Touchstone
release.
10/18/04
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