Ha ha and Dykstraflex, it’s Burl, here to
review a new picture from Quentin Tarantino, who brought us Django Unchained and a number of other
pictures! Now he’s got a movie about Hollywood at the hard fall the 1960s! It’s
a fable, and by this time in our culture it’s a fairy tale, and so it’s called Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood!
It’s a simple and quite sweet movie! It’s
about Hollywood and the 1960s, yes, and it’s a little bit about Charles Manson
and his family of kookoo nuggets, and it’s almost about their crime, but really
it’s a portrait of male friendship and the loss of puissance! (Ha ha, as if to
discourage Freudian takes on that, or hook it up to simple aging, the only man
explicitly stated to be having sex in the movie is Bruce Dern, who must be a
hundred and five by now!) As a sort of sideline, the movie shows us the process
behind the transformation of a star into a character actor, and for those with
any interest in this kind of career trajectory, it’s a fine old pumpernickel of
a bonus!
In the story we mostly stick with either Rick
Dalton, a TV star who has aged out of the roles that made him popular; or else
Cliff Booth, Rick’s stunt double, dogsbody, and pal; or else, most often
actually, both of them! Around them revolves a large cast, from celebrity
lookalikes (the Steve McQueen suggests an uncanny melding of McQueen and Gene
Wilder) to old ringers like Bruce Dern and Al Pacino and even Clu "Tapeheads" Gulager, to the
younger actors who have real parts, like Margot Robie as Sharon Tate (who gets
some nice moments watching herself in a Matt Helm picture) and Emile Hirch, who
plays Sharon’s hairdresser pal Jay Sebring!
The picture winds pleasantly through the
Hollywood Hills, spending time also in Musso & Frank’s (where I too have
sat and listened to tales of Tinseltown’s underbelly while drinking whiskey
sours, and had to leave through the back door because in front the cops had
shot some poor addled street person waving a Swiss army knife around!) and
along the Sunset Strip (though I was surprised none of the characters went to
any clubs!), and Cliff, played by Brad Pitt, even drives along Yucca once, with
the 7-11 visible in the background, past the building where Ed Wood lived out
his declining years!
Of the climax of the picture, which
involves a home invasion by the Manson gang, I will say nothing, except that it
doesn’t go down exactly like you read in the papers, ha ha! There’s something
about the wish-fulfillment aspect of it that doesn’t quite sit right; also the
merciless violence of it; but on the other hand it’s a fine wish, and it’s a
lot of fun to watch in an animal brain sort of way!
The picture has many entertaining digressions, a
ton of beguiling period details, and is pure joy for the movie lover! The
visual effects by none other than John Dykstra are seamless and superb! Brad
Pitt’s character is a bit of a black hole, but he’s an amiable one, and
Leonardo Di Caprio, in the role of Rick, cries a lot! I thoroughly recommend Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood, and give
it the three Georges, Peppard, Maharis and Chikaris! Ha ha!