
...
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
|
||
|
||
|
Tis the season of actor-cum-directors, what with
George Clooney sheparding Confessions of a Dangerous
Mind and Nicholas Cage helming Sonny. Not to
be outdone, Denzel Washington is behind the lensing of Antwone Fisher.
Antwone Fisher, as a
directing debut is not as daring as Dangerous Mind,
but rather, it is a lovingly crafted message film about a disturbed young man
who cannot move forward until he has made peace with his troubled past. With the notable
exception of Training Day (for which he won a 2002 Academy
Award), Washington is most well known for his capacity to portray even the most
provocative subjects, from Malcolm X to Ruben
Hurricane Carter, with balance and bearing. He is able to imbue even the
most self-inured characters (such as Memphis Bleek in Spike Lees Mo Better Blues) with nobility.
In Antwone, Washington the
actor steps aside, playing a significant but peripheral role in the story of Antwone
Fisher. As his shrink and naval superior, Washington resists acting as a father figure or
surrogate and offers center stage to his discovery, Derek Luke. Just as America Ferrera
left a striking impression late last year in her feature film debut, Real Women Have Curves,
Lukes performance marks him a force to be reckoned with. As Antwone, Luke captures
rage and frustration and finally, vindication. While the story of real life Antwone
Fisher, a former Sony security guard turned screenwriter, would seem to be intriguing
source material, Luke defies the script, which is otherwise heavy-handed, to add subtle
shadings to his portrayal of an adolescent at risk, who against all odds, has survived.
His Antwone is perpetually set on simmer, with a rage from unresolved childhood traumas
set to boil over from the slightest distress. While altercations with fellow sailors have
brought him to the edge of dismissal, these trespasses have also allowed him one final
chance: three sessions with Navy psychiatrist Jerome Davenport.
In recent years the doctor-patient relationship has become all too
fertile ground in both TV (The
Sopranos) and mainstream film (Analyze
This). Antwone treads carefully.
Davenport assigns his patient John W. Blassingames study, The
Slave Community, to better understand the patterns of abuse among former slaves.
But history explains and doesn't excuse--the film doesn't let Antwones opprobrious
foster family off the hook as it explores Antwones fraught childhood. It is also
self-critical of a therapeutic program that only offers three chances at success.
Washington has chosen Antwone
not merely as the autobiographical tale of one Antwone Fisher, but as a vehicle to
contextualize the pathology of young African-American men. But the film paints with more
than a broad brush Washington's used a roller to cover up all of the narrative
holes and gaps and re-shaped a life so that it resembles a modern fairy tale.
But there is a moment of verisimilitude. After canvassing the
whole of Cleveland, Atwone finally reunites with his birth mother. With a few disinterred
words of profound remorse, Viola Davis strips away what feels vaguely like a two-hour
recruitment spot for the Navy and imbues the scene with austerity and dead-eyed angst.
Daviss silences are harrowing; they completely obliterate Antwone Fishers
moralizing.
Perhaps afraid of losing his audience after so desolate an outcome,
Washington then takes us to an ad-hoc family reunion with what seems to be hundreds
of relatives. One would have to have a heart of coal to resist the climax of the film, yet
it is not honestly earned. What might have been acceptable as a waking dream becomes more
surreal than Clooneys efforts, but unintentionally so. The Antwone Fisher
screenplay takes a page from Spielberg and offers melodrama as denouement. Thematically, Antwone
falls somewhere between An
Officer and a Gentleman and last years fine The
Sleepy Time Gal Martha Plimptons search for birth mother Jacqueline
Bisset. But by making literal the fantasy of finding ones place in
history--ones heritage--Antwone Fisher ceases to be about a man, it is an
allegory.
Denzels own subplot exists barely as two passing exchanges. Only
as a coda does Dr. Davenport reveal that he and his wife have been grappling with their
inability to conceive a child. Jettisoning this story constrains Antwone to a
very simplistic plane. As Denzels wife Bertha, Salli Richardson does the best work
possible, given that she has scarcely more lines than an extra.
Antwone Fisher has moments that are inspiring. Sadly, the
dramatic licenses taken undermine the authenticity of the endeavor. What could have been
heartfelt feels contrived and manipulative. Despite this, Denzel knows how to choose
his material well and how to direct his actors. Perhaps in future projects he will trust
his instincts and focus on the story first and agenda second.
- Jerry Weinstein