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The Space Cowboys (2000)
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On the surface Clint Eastwoods Space
Cowboys looks like a frivolous chemistry experiment: What will happen if four
dissimilar icons are squashed into a single motion picture and have to meld their styles
together? Working overtime, Eastwood not only defuses this landmine but redeems a
cliche-riddled script that has no business working half as well as it does. Space Cowboys has a humming surface and a grown-up
sweetness its a kiddie movie for adults.
Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones, Donald Sutherland, and James Garner play the
members of Team Dedalus, a flight-test crew ignominiously dumped from the higher echelons
of jet-testing in the dawn of the Space Age. Theyve drifted away from each other
over the years, but when a defective Russian communications satellite called IKON
threatens to crash into the earth, NASA turns for help to retired Colonel Frank Corvin
(Eastwood), the man who designed IKONs antiquated guidance system. Once Corvin
convinces the brass that IKON can only be fixed in space, hes in position to
blackmail NASA into letting him fulfill an old dream: to lead Team Dedalus into outer
space. NASA agrees, but only on the condition that the mission will be scrubbed if Corvin
and his team cant keep up with the training regimen of the younger astronauts who
are to accompany them on the space shuttle.
But the
training is only one of Team Dedalus many worries. An old nemesis from their Air
Force days is now the director of NASA (James Cromwell), and hes working behind the
scenes to queer their chances of success. Corvins co-pilot, Hawk Hawkins
(Jones), begins falling in love with the mission director (Marcia Gay Harden). One of the
most likable members of the team is suffering from an inoperable disease and may have to
give up his seat on the shuttle. And the mystery of how an American guidance system found
its way into a Soviet-era Russian satellite takes on increasingly ominous implications.
Space Cowboys ads make it look like a string
of Geritol jokes, and God knows it has plenty of Ripe Stuff gags, not all of
which are as funny as Sutherlands eyeglasses that look like parts from the Hubble
telescope. But instead of treating the men as Cocoon-type husks
whose vitality has been depleted, the movie is built around the idea that theyre as
alive as theyve ever been, and that if anyone is washed up, its the tired
bureaucrats and brown-nosing young astronauts that surround them. And Space Cowboys knows that theres more to
comedy than horselaughs. When Team Dedalus makes a PR stop on Jay Lenos show, the
leathery fly-boys josh each other on national TV about their undiminished sex drives,
while Harden is seen watching the show from her bed, nearly purring as her guys charm
America senseless. The scenes double-dip of good vibes feels like a great massage.
Eastwood
gives his trademark glare whenever the brass suggests that hes not a team player,
but otherwise his performance is an act of self-effacement: he doesnt block our view
of his co-stars. Theres not much to block when it comes to James Garner, though.
Once Garners character is introduced (hes a Baptist preacher who abandons his
tiny flock for the mission), he doesnt really do anything except carry the little
hula-girl doll hes had since his Air Force days into space. Why didnt the
writers make Tank Sullivan the teams most articulate member, tossing off the droll
asides that Garner built a career on? At least they paid attention to Donald
Sutherlands old movies, for Jerry ONell is the same kind of giddiness-inducing
rebel that Sutherland played in Kellys Heroes.
But ultimately Space Cowboys is a Tommy Lee
Jones movie. Jones has the same electric swagger that he had in The Fugitive (when
he comes onscreen, you can feel the audience perking up in its chairs), and here his
little shivers of melancholy make Hawk the most interesting member of the team. With his
Texas accent, direct gaze, and natural acting style, Jones makes you realize what a
relative notion charisma is. Even Clint Eastwood looks constipated next to the
man.
For all its
good humor, Space Cowboys still might have
been a chore to watch if not for the restraint and surprising gentleness shown by Eastwood
the director. The movie has its lapses, including a draggy midsection and what has to be
the least involving blastoff sequence ever put on film, but Eastwood pulls the movie
together once his crew gets into space. He doesnt let Space Cowboys impressive special effects
overwhelm his characters, not even when IKON is breaking apart and its pieces are
shattering against the space shuttles cockpit. Instead of pulverizing us with music
and sound effects, he offers a fresh vision of space flight and unexpected surprises such
as IKONs set design, a witty piece of work that makes it look malevolent and junky
by turns.
Eastwood
saves some of his best efforts for a long sequence that culminates in a reversal of Slim
Pickens apocalyptic, wahooing A-bomb ride in Dr. Strangelove
in Eastwoods hands it becomes a majestic affirmation. And he tops himself in
the movies closing moments when his camera finds the sanest, most memorably tranquil
image in his long career. Like Frank Corvin, Eastwood minimizes his handicaps and saves
the day with some easy-going professionalism. And like Team Dedalus, we realize that the
best things often come just when we think the ride is over.
- Tom Block