BEFORE: I finally figured out what the chain was trying to tell me, I think - why so many films about fathers showed up here, a bit out of turn. The continuing pattern was about the need to let go, like Knox in "Knox Goes Away" was trying to get out of the hit-man life and clear his accounts, and Andy Goodrich in "Goodrich" was dealing with the closing of his art gallery, again trying to get out of his job and lifestyle and balance that with his life, as best as he could. During that same weekend, my boss of 30 years was part of a celebration of his career and the fact that he's turning 80 (and still not retiring, despite my rejected sane advice to do so) so like those characters, I need to be comfortable with MY decision to get out of that life, just about a year ago I "got clean" and I refused to participate in the birthday celebration/roast/tribute or whatever it was.
Oh, oh, and Frank Costello was seen trying to retire and get out of the mob, which most people are unable to do while they're still breathing. So that's THREE films in a row with main characters deciding to get clear of their job/lifestyle, and move forward. OK, chain, the message has been received. I made the right move when I did, now it would be great to get that one last sign from the universe that I managed to get off the sinking ship before it sank. So now would be a really good time to learn that the ship did indeed sink, just saying. Robert De Niro carries over from "The Alto Knights".
THE PLOT: A film producer who owes money to a mobster tries to "accidentally" kill his aging movie star for an insurance scam to pay off his debt, but he begins to realize that the movie they're shooting is a masterpiece in the making.
AFTER: As I mentioned yesterday, I'm in the process of previewing docs for my summer (?) Doc Block, and one of the docs I took a spin through yesterday was about Roger Corman, the producer of over 450 films in his career, some very famous ones and really, a lot of low-budget flops. Mr. Corman also reminds me of the animator I worked for, somebody with "artist brain" who sees themselves like a shark, as if they'll die if they don't keep swimming forward. Which is not true, a filmmaker CAN retire if they want to, it's just practically unheard of because of their giant egos (they'll somehow cease to exist if their name's not on a marquee somewhere) also they HAVE to keep working because they're so far in debt that they need to make another film that isn't going to do well to help pay for the last one they made that didn't do well. It's a form of madness, I know - but that perfectly sets up De Niro's character in "The Comeback Trail", Max Barber, who is similarly deep in debt, but also just ONE successful film away from clearing his debt and also being relevant again. Yeah, I'm going to get the stress dreams again tonight, for sure - I've lived this exact situation for a long time.
To be fair, I worked mostly in animation, and that's a whole different animal - umm, except when it isn't. When I started working for the studio my boss had finished an animated feature two years before, and was working on two live-action features, despite having a reputation for cartoons, he for some reason wanted to work in the regular film medium (one feature did have a little animation in it) so for the first two or three years of my animation career, I wasn't working on animation at all, instead the company was employing an editor, an assistant editor and a sound editor, with a weekly rent on an editing suite uptown. My job involved not only running the office but also sending boxes of VHS collections of my boss's short films to distributors, but also getting weekly bank checks to a payroll service so those editors and I could get properly, legally paid every Friday. Now, one of those features turned out to be a mockumentary (this was after "Spinal Tap" but before "Waiting for Guffman") about the making of a Western movie, and everything during the production of the film-within-the-film went horribly wrong, like several cast members died due to faulty equipment or bad catering...so yeah, I may know a thing or two about the subject matter here.
This film is also kind of a riff on "The Producers", where two stage producers try to make a play so bad that it will close after opening night, and they won't have to return any profits to the investors and can keep all the money. In "The Comeback Trail", Max Barber learns that when a famous Hollywood actor/stuntman died on set, the producer collected on a $5 million insurance policy - so that's when he hatches his own scheme, to hire a very old (and suicidal) actor as his lead, and then look for ways to make the stunts go wrong on the set, and when he dies, that's $5 million he didn't have before, which is even more than the $1 million he's offered for that magic screenplay that he's sitting on. With $5 million he could clear all of his debts, get ahead of things, maybe even retire. Umm, who are we kidding, he's only going to blow that money on making more terrible movies, and/or keeping the studio open for another three years, at which point he'll be RIGHT back in the same situation, and in debt once again. Trust me, I understand exactly how that "artist brain" works. Max Barber, just like Max Bialystock, can't stop making more productions, because he would then cease to exist.
So once Barber has his leading man cast, first he learns all the commands for the stunt-horse. One code word makes the horse run away very fast, another makes the horse rear up, and still another word makes the horse go completely crazy. But somebody spills water on the list of code words, so Max gets them all mixed up, of course, True to form, whatever can go wrong will go wrong, and here there's another dimension, since Max is TRYING to make an accident happen, naturally nothing works out as it should, so all attempts to cause disaster and kill Duke Montana fail, and then this starts to resemble a Road Runner / Wile. E. Coyote situation.
Next Max suggests filming the most dangerous stunt first, which means setting the wagons on fire and having Duke and the horse jump right through it. Then there's the rope bridge over the canyon, and Max monkeys with the ropes the night before so that Duke will fall to his death. Then there's the scene with the wild bull, when Duke fails to wear the red hat and decides to stick with his regular one, you know, for continuity purposes. But in all cases, two fails means that things start going WELL, and despite Max's best efforts, they start making an actual movie.
NITPICK POINT: I thought it could have been a great gag if Max had neglected to actually take out that insurance policy on Duke, but I guess I'm the only person who thinks that would have been funny. You know, the producer's got a scheme to pull the insurance scam, but also he's too cheap to lay out the money for the policy, or he's too stupid to realize that he'd have to do the paperwork to set all that up. From my experience, that's exactly how that should have gone down, I can't tell you how many times I had to get a replacement policy for workmen's compensation or disability insurance, both of which are legally required to operate a business with employees, only the boss couldn't understand that the monthly bills need to be paid, err, monthly.
Against all reasonable expectations, "The Oldest Gun in the West" turns out to be a hit movie, so I guess the lesson for us all is that if you plan to fail, and your plans don't work out, you might succeed? Wait, I thought that nobody plans to fail, they only fail to plan... Nah, let's go with the first one, it makes much more sense than that stupid line about how "If you shoot for the moon, and you miss, you still land in the stars." Umm, no, you don't, if you shoot for the moon and you miss, you get stranded in empty space and you die. Just saying.
Directed by George Gallo (director of "Middle Men" and writer of "Bad Boys: Ride or Die")
Also starring Tommy Lee Jones (last seen in "Faye"), Morgan Freeman (last seen in "Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story"), Zach Braff (last seen in "The Last Kiss"), Emile Hirsch (last seen in "The Girl Next Door"), Sheryl Lee Ralph (last seen in "Just Getting Started"), Kate Katzman (last seen in "Walt Before Mickey"), Eddie Griffin (last seen in "The New Guy"), Chris Mullinax, Patrick Muldoon (last seen in "Marlowe"), Julie Lott (last seen in "Middle Men"), Aighleann McKiernan (ditto), Blerim Destani, Vincent Spano (last seen in "The Black Stallion Returns"), Paul Witten, Melissa Greenspan (last seen in "Senior Moment"), Joel Michaely (last seen in "The Card Counter"), Jermaine Washington (last seen in "Fast Color"), Desiree Geraldine, Morse Bicknell (last seen in "The Space Between Us"), Michael Davis, Robert Benedetti (last seen in "Legal Eagles"), Danno Hanks, Ray Bouderau (last seen in "The Clapper"), Dylan Flashner (last seen in "Bandit"), Leslie Stratton (ditto), Leroy Morgan, Garrison Cahill Griffith, Malcolm Barret (last seen in "My Best Friend's Girl"), Frances Lee McCain (last seen in "Brats"), Bill Luckett, Jake Hunter, Chelsea Newman, Dobromir Mashukov, Kyron Bonner, Christina Ann Sweeney, Michelle Maylene, Natalie Burn (last seen in "Mechanic: Resurrection"), Josefine Lindegaard (last seen in "Rebel Moon - Part Two: The Scargiver"), Kiersten Dolbec, Ekaterina Baker (last seen in "Fatman"), Emily Casazza, Nick Vallelonga (last seen in "The Many Saints of Newark"), Hansel Ramirez, Erik Sahlein, Leonard Waldner
RATING: 6 out of 10 old people desperate to get out of the nursing home (was this supposed to be funny? I'm not seeing it...)
