

.home | art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
Committed (2000)
|
Some movies are like cinematic Advil: they dull the throb of
life without ever getting you high. The next time the world is beating you up and you need
to hunker down for a couple hours, you might want to watch Committed. It not only
unknots the gristle in modern life, it tenderizes the meat in it to the consistency of
mashed potatoes.
Committed follows the fortunes of Joline (Heather Graham), a New
York City rock-club owner for whom fidelity is the bedrock of life. To Jo, keeping
ones word is a religion, a non-negotiable proposition that governs her relationships
with her friends, her employees, and especially her husband Carl (Luke Wilson). And so
when Carl undergoes a sudden (and sketchy) life crisis and walks out on her, Jo takes off
in pursuit of him with only a picture postcard of a prickly pear cactus as a clue to his
whereabouts. She roams the stretches of western Texas until she finds him working for an
El Paso newspaper and living in a mobile home near the Mexican border. At first she only
spies on him, meddling in his life from behind the scenes in hopes that, having found
fulfillment, hell return to her. But when she finds Carl keeping company with a
waitress at Mexican restaurant (the flinty Patricia Velazquez), she embarks on a spiritual
vigil to make him return to her side. When he doesnt, her devotion spills over into
obsession, and she has to bridge the gulf between her idealism and an obstinate real
world.
Joline is known as Jo to her friends, and everything in Committed
is stamped with this same kind of coziness. Even Jos breakdown and confinement in a
mental ward are muffled theres nothing crazy about her craziness. No real
ache or outrage is allowed to intrude on this feel-okay movie, not even when Jo forces two
would-be highway robbers into an absolutely hellacious car crash. Director Lisa Krueger
plays down to her wispy material, presenting her scenes like exhibits in a doily museum.
Even the bits of humor that work a shot of Jo disconsolately hugging a dog which is
then led off by its irate owner, or Jo sitting in her car and being serenaded by a
mariachi band thats gathered round the drivers door dont elicit
laughs so much as a distanced "mmm" from the back of ones throat.
Committed combines what seems like every indie cliche into a
single motion picture. The attractive and independent but lovelorn heroine. The menagerie
of eccentrics who catch the variety of life but none of its flavor. The quirky adventures
that dont build on each other. The low-key charm and obligatory nod to magical
realism. The trendy, kitschy settings. And all of it culminating in a series of open-ended
questions spoken in voice-over, naturally that tell us how damned relative
life is once everything is said and done. By the end you feel like youve been
chloroformed.
Graham fits into the movies look and mood or rather, she is
its look and mood but she never flashes that gesture of actorly defiance that you
cant get out of your mind once the lights come up, which is a feat considering her
screen-time. Shes best when not reciting Kruegers broth-thin dialogue, for as
she showed in Bowfinger, that
stringbean, knock-kneed body is a comedians natural tool chest. (Heres hoping
she finds material thats worthy of it.) Luke Wilson, who showed promise not all that
long ago, has already played too many of these bland supporting roles one more
hangdog look from the guy and somebodys sure to kill him. As the Mexican medicine
man who becomes Jos mentor, Alfonso Arau never gets to change his Mount Rushmore
expression, and Krueger has jammed him into a cowboy hat that hides the top half of his
head a shame since Arau can be a wonderfully expressive actor. Casey Affleck comes
off best as Jay, Jolines brother. The movies one truly funny creation, Jay is
in a perpetual state of heat he even comes on to Jo at one point and Affleck
delivers his lines in a semi-hoarse whisper that makes it seem as if the weakness in
Jays flesh extends even to his vocal chords.
Whenever a Waterworld or Phantom Menace comes out, its not unusual to
hear someone decrying how all that money could have been better spent on the public weal
so many homeless fed, classrooms built, and so on. Its a silly way of
thinking, this equating of apples and oranges under some Harpers Index calculation,
for it isnt as if the $200 million dollars spent on Titanic was the only $200 million dollars on the face
of the earth. And yet after watching a gossamer nothing like Committed, one
cant help thinking that the few million dollars that it cost could have paid
plenty of teachers, too.
- Tom Block