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The
Cavemans Valentine and last years American Psycho
both take a gander (or pretend to) at American class craziness through the eyes of
characters whose elevators dont go all the way to the top, but otherwise the two
movies are reverse images of each other. Where American
Psychos Patrick Bateman was a wealthy white stockbroker whose psychotic
fantasies caused him to butcher transients and prostitutes, the main character of The Cavemans Valentine is a black homeless
paranoid schizophrenic intent on bringing an omnipotent powermonger to justice.
Romulus Ledbetter (Samuel L.
Jackson) wasnt always on the bottom, though. He was born well-to-do, started a
family young, and was a Julliard-trained musician with a promising career before his life
got out of hand. Now hes homeless, half-mad, and known on the street as the
Caveman because he lives inside a small rocky enclosure under Manhattans
Inwood Park. Rom has cut himself off from everyone connected with his former life except
his daughter Lulu (Aunjanue Ellis), a NYPD police officer whos increasingly
frustrated by her fathers bizarre conspiracy theories. These theories revolve around
the omni-corrupt Cornelius Gould Stuyvesant, a sandwiching of historical personages into
one imaginary figure that Rom has made his personal nemesis. As Rom sees him, the rich,
power-mad, and ruthless Stuyvesant is responsible for all of the worlds evils. From
a penthouse atop the Chrysler Building he controls the worlds population with
invisible rays, keeping a special close eye on the one threat that still exists to his
empirethe freethinking Caveman.
When Rom
finds the frozen body of a young man outside his cave on Valentines Day, hes
sure that its Stuyvesants handiwork, left behind as a ghastly
valentine. The cops dont buy it, of course, and when they write off the
transients death it seems like Stuyvesant has won another victory. But Rom learns
that the murdered boy was once the model and abused lover of David Leppenraub (Colm
Feore), a famous art photographer whose work has an S&M streak running through its
grain. Convinced that Leppenraub is both the boys murderer and one of
Stuyvesants henchman, Romulus leaves his cave and reenters society in order to
effect one small act of justice and thereby deliver his own message to Stuyvesant. The
only question is whether he can fend off the voicesand the fear underlying
themlong enough to accomplish the feat.
George
Dawes Green was allowed to adapt The Cavemans
Valentine from his 1994 novel, and that was probably a mistake. Green showed no great
feeling for character even in his book, and his plotting and dialogue both had a
making-it-up-as-it-goes-along quality that have found their way into the film version. The
movie omits most of what little explanation the book offered for Roms condition,
leaving us to think that the grandiose myths hes built up around Stuyvesant somehow
sprang from the stage-fright he used to feel before his piano recitals, but why a
privileged composers artistic dread manifests itself as a left-leaning conspiracy
theory is the movies biggest mystery. Director Kasi Lemmon (Eves Bayou)
is more concerned with the art design of Roms craziness than its meaning: with
disheartening regularity, were plunged into the imaginary vaulted chamber, filled
with fantastic moth-like creatures and Alvin Ailey dancers, that represents the inner
sanctum of Roms mind.
Nothing in The Cavemans Valentine feels properly
grounded or set up. The ease with which Rom befriends a bankruptcy lawyer, infiltrates
Leppenraubs farm and inner circle, and begins an affair with Leppenraubs
sister (Ann Magnuson), makes all of these events seem like mere plot conveniences. Time
and again bland dialogue and sluggish timing undo potentially witty scenes, and the
films various milieusstreet junkies, high financiers, and avant-garde artists
alikefeel guessed at. The long sequence at Leppenraubs farm is especially
synthetic, and contains what may be the most galling depiction of intellectual life since Five Easy Pieces.
Leppenraub (whose controversial artwork and name would have made Robert Mapplethorpe consider
a lawsuit) is reputed to engage in kinky sex, prattles on about suffering, has
a dog named Lao-Tse, and is surrounded by the tony, phony sort of people that Spy Magazine
used to fricassee.
Working under a mop of dreadlocks that
look like long tarantula legs, Sam Jackson gives his most imaginative performance in
years. He doesn't rely on his unstable cobalt
presence to earn his paycheck for a change, and if The Caveman's Valentine had
any heft at all, Romulus Ledbetter could have been his career-defining role. Ann
Magnuson gives the movie a much-needed shot of humanity despite having her
characters inner life stripped away in its transition to the screen, and Anthony
Michael Hall (as the bankruptcy lawyer) continues to show a good-humored versatility that
seemed unlikely to emerge in his teen years. Performers like these deserve better than the
material theyve gotten.
Using a man who's
trapped inside his own reality as the detective in a murder mystery is a stroke of
sadistic genius: the natural way we root for the handicapped, and pray that their
disability wont betray them at the worst possible second, should be unbearable in
that scenario. But Roms brain typhoons never come into play in any vital
way; the moment never comes when his craziness completely disables him in his sleuthing.
(Even better, it could be used to give him some brilliant leg-up thats unavailable
to the sane, but in The Cavemans Valentine
something like the precise opposite happens.) When his spells do come, theyre of the type that make him
have to go outside and walk them off, not the type that cause people to call the police.
If the filmmakers are unfamiliar with mental illness, theyre even
less so with quality avant-garde music. Rom sits down to play his compositions twice in
the film, and both times you come away wondering whos crazier: Romulus or his
instructors at Julliard. Roms thunderous piano rolls sound like a head-on collision
between John Tesh and Ferrante & Teischer. Not since The Piano has
ostensibly brilliant music been so awful.
- Tom Block