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When under-utilized actors suddenly shine as
bright as any star in the firmament, is it the director, the script, or the actors
themselves who are responsible? The answer is probably all three. Whatever the case, after
already lengthy careers, Paul Giamatti (American Splendor), Thomas Haden Church
(Tombstone)
and Virgina Madsen (Crossfire
Trail) all give the best performances of their lives in Sideways, the new
film from writer-director Alexander Payne and co-writer Jim Taylor, the team responsible
for Election and About Schmidt.
Like About Schmidt, Sideways starts out as a road trip
movie before settling down in the town of Los Olivos to tackle some serious relationship
issues among the characters. Based on the
book by Rex Pickett, the story follows San Diego native Miles (Giamatti) and Los
Angeles resident Jack (Church) as they go to Santa Barbara wine country to celebrate
Jacks final week of freedom before his marriage to Christine (Alysia Reiner). Miles
is a middle-school English teacher and aspiring novelist who divorced two years ago and
has since been seeing a therapist and taking Xanex for depression. Jack is a television
actor who once had starring roles on soap operas but now is reduced to commercial
voice-overs. On their trip, they encounter Maya (Madsen) and Stephanie (Sandra Oh, Last Night). Jack immediately
seduces Stephanie leaving Miles to fumble over the also recently divorced Maya. The
interactions with the two women illuminate the relationship between the two men and their
approaches to life.
Sideways explores how the need for social affirmation
often requires overlooking flaws in those befriended. Miles and Jack were once college
roommates and their long history together continues to unite them, even though on a
day-to-day level they dont particularly like each other. In fact, the two are pretty
much opposites. Miles is cerebral and literate, citing Robbe-Grillet as a inspiration for
his unpublished novel, whose title makes for a nice joke. Hes also a wine snob whose
favorite grape, the Pinot, acts as a metaphor for himself delicate and requiring
constant care and attention. (Alcoholics beware! Sideways is to wine as Tampopo
is to noodles.)
While Miles is a pessimist who plays everything safe, Jack is an
optimist who consistently disregards potential consequences in his reckless pursuit of
fun. Jack looks the other way at Miles intellectual condescension and passivity
while Miles tries to ignore Jacks anything-for-fun ethics, specifically his
willingness to cheat on his fiance with no regret whatsoever. They lie to each other
frequently, though both can see through the small lies the other tells. To avoid a social
gathering for planning Jacks wedding, Miles makes up the excuse of heavy traffic.
Jack lies about having read the latest draft of Miles book. Its the big lies,
or rather the withholding of important information, that stuns the two friends.
Payne has an eye for making the mundane remarkable through specificity
of details and that is readily apparent here. Even characters with minimal screen time
convey strong personalities. Furthermore, Payne refuses to fall back on formula. He
utilizes a split screen to substitute for the usual montage of time passing, and he and
Taylor don't write simple resolutions to long-term problems stemming from character
traits.
The movies best scene finds Miles and Maya left alone for the
evening after Jack has retreated to the bedroom for some noisy sex with Stephanie. With
the self-conscious pressure now turned on, Miles and Maya poke and prod for an opening
toward greater intimacy. Giamatti and Madsens duel with courtship protocol is as
stirring as any cinematic swordfight and both prove without a doubt that they have arrived
as astounding acting talents.
- George Wu