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Review by Richard Kirkham Originally Published in the Fall of 2014
This
summer has been a cruel one for fans of "Get Shorty". In June, James
Gandolfini who played Bear the enforcer for Bo the Drug Dealer/wanna be
movie producer, passed away at a relatively young 51. Last month, Dennis
Farina who played Ray "Bones" Barboni left us at 69. This last week,
Elmore Leonard the novelist and screenwriter responsible for the story
and characters in the first place, left us at age 87. I'm not suggesting
there is a curse or anything, but if this film does not get included
before anyone else from the cast dies, I will feel terrible. "Get
Shorty" is a star vehicle, and it featured John Travolta in a great part
immediately after his comeback role in "Pulp Fiction". In spite of the
obvious star driven nature of the film, there is a great ensemble cast
that adds to the quality of the movie and makes it something I think
everyone will be glad to have seen.John Chambers: [after hearing of the plan to get the hostages out] So you want to come to Hollywood, act like a big shot...
Tony Mendez: Yeah.
John Chambers: ...without actually doing anything?
Tony Mendez: Yeah.
John Chambers: [smiles] You'll fit right in!
That is the plot of this movie. Everyone thinks they can be in the movie business and they are right. Yet being in the movie business does not always mean making a movie, sometimes it is about talking about making a movie. Our lead character Chili Palmer, played by John Travolta is good at talking.
Chili
is a loan shark from Miami, who ends up in Hollywood while running down
a customer who has tried to outsmart the mob. He is not a thug but he
is not a pushover by any stretch of the imagination. Chili is the kind
of guy who is usually too smart for everyone else in the room. He is
also a movie fan and like many other fans of film, he thinks he can do
better than the people who are currently making it in "Tinseltown". The
plot involves him trying to find financing and a star for the movie he
has in his head. That's right, the movie in his head. There is a
screenplay for another movie that is pivotal to the plot, but most of
what we see on the screen is the movie that Chili sees turning into his
own film. It's a movie about a loan shark who comes to Hollywood in
pursuit of a bad debt. He is making up the movie out of his life story
as he is living it. That is a pretty awesome way of creating a screen
story, if only all of us could lead an interesting enough life to do
that, we would be able to get rid of all the remakes and sequels that
come out of the film world today.
Travolta
is a walking advertisement of "cool" in this film. He dresses in a
sharp manner that doesn't seem ostentatious, he looks great in
sunglasses and finally, he may be able to set the anti-smoking cause
back by ten years. When he lights up and stares down an adversary, it is
a moment everyone in the business will want to emulate. Travolta was at
the top of his game in the moment this film was made. He was natural,
charismatic and he had an everyman touch despite the fact that it was
clear he was not everyone. Warren Beatty was apparently offered the
role, and from the looks department and the cool factor you can
understand why he seemed a good fit, but Travolta has a sense of humor
in his eye that makes the part work, and when he drops the veneer of
friendliness he feels dangerous in a way that I think Beatty would not
have been able to match.
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Rene
Russo is Karen, a b-movie scream queen, and Harry's girlfriend. It
doesn't take long for Chili and Karen to connect because they are the
two most intelligent characters in the movie. Whenever Chili is
confounded by some stupidity in Hollywood, Karen is right there to to
interpret for him. Russo is completely believable as a working actress
who should know better and has greater ambition than originally seems.
As the ex-wife of movie star Martin Weir, she connects Chili and Harry
to some real power in Hollywood, a major star. Danny Devito seems like
an odd candidate for the role but he channels his friend Jack Nicholson
and creates an actor who is serious about his work but indifferent to
how it effects others. In the film "The Player" Tim Robbins' character
orders a different kind of fashionable water at every meeting, and then
he never drinks. Martin Weir special orders food and then never takes a
bite. It is one of the irritating ways that the pecking order in
Hollywood might be measured.
In
the background of the story are several other perfectly cast
characters. David Paymer does nervous and combative at the same time.
Bette Midler, who was unbilled in the film, does sexy and smart ass.
Miguel Sandoval has made a living playing drug lords and government
officials. Here he is menacing as he discusses taking in the Universal
Tour and then maybe murdering some of the other characters in the movie.
There is a long line of character actors who all bring this movie some
realism and personality.
The
director Barry Sonnenfield should get a lot of credit for making the
movie play so well. There are great tracking shots that don't call
attention to themselves but make the movie feel even more movie like.
The look of all the locations is also important. Martin Weir's arrival
for lunch at "The Ivy" is staged like a red carpet moment for an every
day Hollywood activity. Harry's office looks rundown, over stuffed and
heavenly to a movie fan who would love to have those kinds of film
mementos on the walls and bookshelves. Bo's house in the Hollywood Hills
is both pretentious and strangely attractive.
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Richard
Kirkham is a lifelong movie enthusiast from Southern California. While
embracing all genres of film making, he is especially moved to write
about and share his memories of movies from his formative years, the
glorious 1970s. His personal blog, featuring current film reviews as
well as his Summers of the 1970s movie project, can be found at Kirkham A Movie A Day.