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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Why are they smirking?
By David Walsh
24 June 2005
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Mr. & Mrs. Smith, directed by Doug Liman, written by
Simon Kinberg
From time to time readers will write in to the WSWS and criticize
what they perceive to be our relentlessly negative
attitude toward mainstream films. Dont you like anything?
they ask somewhat plaintively. One reader asserted recently that
filmgoers, after all, want to check their brain at the door
when they enter the theater. We sincerely hope that he changes
his views. In the long run, we suspect, the individual who willingly
chooses to check his brain at the door of the cinema or in any
other public space will not find the critical and probing efforts
of this site to his liking.
For those who have not given up their right to think and feel
with some depth, commercial filmmaking offers a rather bleak prospect
at the moment. And, unhappily, mere chance does not operate in
the cultural world as it does in other spheres. Reviewing films
is not like tossing a coin. For every five poor films or worse,
lets say, the law of averages does not guarantee an equal
number of works of distinction, or even one.
There are periods of almost universal official stupidity
and mediocrity, when heads, or at least certain prominent heads,
appear to have emptied out. One has to wage war against the dominant
trends and, if ones limited powers make any difference,
help clear the path for something better.
There is no particular pleasure to be taken in describing the
obvious failings of obviously flawed or even truly deplorable
films. One feels a certain amount of sympathy for the actors and
film industry workers trapped in stupid, time-wasting productions.
But softening the critical hostility to the latter will not help
the most sensitive and intelligent elements find a way out of
their present predicament.
And one should not forget that the American media and entertainment
establishment oversees and profits from these bloated film projects
to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars; the same establishment
that accepted the hijacking of a presidential election, the assault
on democratic norms and the launching of an illegal, murderous
war without so much as an artistic murmur; the same establishment
that works night and day to poison the intelligence of the people,
pollute the social atmosphere and degrade every aspect of social
life.
One would find it easier to tolerate a Mr. & Mrs. Smith,
for example, if it were the exception, if its appearance coincided
with the opening of five films that actually looked at life in
an interesting or thoughtful manner. But the opposite is the case:
insofar as the Mr. & Mrs. Smiths absorb intellectual,
technical and financial resources, those others do not see the
light of daythe two categories are mutually exclusive, produced
by opposed tendencies and social impulses.
At the WSWS we will continue to take filmmaking seriously and
demand a great deal of it. And if that means almost continuously
and relentlessly raising our voices against what is being offered,
we claim only one defense: its not our fault.
Mr. & Mrs. Smith is the witless new action
comedy directed by Doug Liman (Go, The Bourne
Identity), in which Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie play a prosperous
suburban couple, John and Jane Smith, each of whom, unbeknownst
to the other, operates as an assassin for an unnamed intelligence
agency (whether private or public remains unclear, as well as
unimportant). When it comes to the attention of the powers that
be that these superstar professional murderers are married, they
are deliberately set against one another on a course of mutual
destruction. Much merriment and mayhem ensues.
In the midst of their frantic attempts to eliminate one another,
Jane and John come to realize the deep love they continue to share
and join forces against their tormentors. They come out on top
of course, with only a few bruises and scrapes, having worked
through their frustrations and resentments with the aid of the
most advanced firepower available. The film is book-ended by the
pairs visits to a marriage counselor, where they glibly
discuss their problems as though they were an average married
couple.
What clever and original soul came up with this concept? How
is it that contemporary Hollywood is so lacking in intelligence,
dramatic sense and, frankly, good taste that such a project even
reached the initial planning stage?
Lets leave aside the fact that Mr. & Mrs. Smith,
half-jocularly of course, condones the government (or proxies
for the government) torturing and assassinating its enemies. Lets
leave aside its glamorization of murderers for hire. Lets
leave aside its conformism and worship of wealth and fashion and
the beautiful people. Lets leave aside its profound
self-satisfaction, its narratives absurdities ... Well,
on second thought, perhaps we cant leave all that aside,
because that doesnt leave much to discuss.
As an action picture, Mr. & Mrs. Smith surely cannot
satisfy. It is neither suspenseful nor exciting. The weaponry
and technologies have been seen before in one or two, or was it
thirty-five, similar films. This is a work going through the motions
in nearly every regard.
As a black comedy Limans film has the most potential.
But like nearly every contemporary work the script and direction
rapidly destroy those possibilities with ridiculous exaggeration
and lack of balance. The films facetious over the
top approach obliterates, pointlessly, any contact with
reality along with the innumerable bodies, vehicles and buildings.
One largely stops caring. That Mr. & Mrs. Smith has
a handful of comic moments, and perhaps five or six recognizably
human situations, is hardly a consolation.
Pitt, a talented actor, is misused or misuses himself here.
Jolie too presumably has talent. One can hardly remember; since
having the misfortune to become one of the film industrys
leading glamour girls she has been condemned to appear in one
awful film after another. In Mr. & Mrs. Smith she pouts,
scowls, or opens her eyes wide and then smiles, all to little
or no effect.
Are the films goings-on intended as a metaphor for the
married state? Are we to see in the Smiths tumultuous relationship
a particularly frenzied and heightened cautionary tale? It can
be said that in many cases husbands and wives dont really
know one another, keep secrets and build up resentments that,
in extreme cases, may assume physically violent or even murderous
proportions.
But with the remarkable insensitivity and obtuseness that dominates
in Hollywood, accentuated by wealth and the influence of a brutalized
society, the filmmakers have rendered the parallel between the
Smiths turmoil and ordinary married life null and void.
Its one thing for Buster Keaton to approach a girl, whose
behavior has maddened him, and instead of strangling, embrace
her. Its quite another when the Smiths attempt to run over,
incinerate and fill one another with bullet-holes. It isnt
amusing or telling, its bizarre and unpleasant. And when
they subsequently jump into one anothers arms, that isnt
endearing or pointed, its simply disquieting. Murder, beatings,
maimings, even fictional ones (as well as ludicrous superhero
stunts and posturings) mean something, they connote something.
They cant be laughed off, like a black eye or a bruised
lip.
What one remembers most about Mr. & Mrs. Smith,
because all the violent episodes tend to blend forgettably into
one, is the sight of Pitt and Jolie on the therapists couch,
smiling and looking pleased with themselves. Of course within
the films structure the joke is on the doctor. Little does
he know who hes dealing with! Two top-notch assassins
acting like a normal married couple. But theres something
more to the smirking than that, unfortunately. The scene, no doubt
unwittingly, also conveys the filmmakers and performers
amusement at the thought of two film stars acting for a moment
like ordinary people.
Are they smirking at their $5 million, $10 million or $15 million
salaries, at their fabulous lifestyles, at their being
celebrities in celebrity-mad America? One hopes not. In any event,
considering that the film is relatively worthless, that the performers
make too many worthless films, that people will look back on these
filmsperhaps including they themselveswith shame,
really there is nothing to smile about.
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