Two Hollywood heavyweights
famous for intellectualizing their work succumb to bad habits in Bobby Deerfield, a plodding romantic
drama without enough narrative substance to support its heavy themes.
Ostensibly the story of a racecar driver mired in existential crisis, the
big-budget misfire gets lost in a maze of pretentious dialogue and vague
characterization. Despite all their
obvious effort to craft something surpassingly sensitive, producer-director
Sydney Pollack and director Al Pacino ended up making something utterly artificial: The storytelling lacks the depth found in Pollack’s best
dramas, and Pacino’s performance is so internalized it validates every
criticism about self-indulgence ever lobbed his way. Bobby Deerfield is especially disappointing because Pacino and
Pollack should have comprised a dream team for fans of thoughtful movies. Based
on a novel by Erich Maria Remarque and written for the screen by the literate
humanist Alvin Sargent, Bobby Deerfield
begins with narcissistic Formula One driver Bobby Deerfield (Pacino) watching a
nasty crash that injures one driver and takes the life of another. Jarred by
the realization that his career involves courting death, Bobby starts wandering
around in an angst-ridden haze, eventually visiting the hospital where the
surviving driver is recuperating. While there, Bobby meets a fellow troubled
soul, Lillian (Marthe Keller), who has a whole different set of issues with
human mortality. Even with Pollack’s consummate skill for constructing love
stories, the dynamic between Bobby and Lillian holds zero interest. Bobby’s
such a cipher it’s impossible to care whether he finds love, and Lillian’s an
ice queen—thus, since their interaction is the whole movie (aside from a few
moderately distracting driving scenes), Bobby
Deerfield is a 124-minute spiral into a black hole of downbeat boredom. The
movie is skillfully made and the acting is strong, within the limitations set
by the murky writing, but who cares? Digging the good stuff from the muck
simply isn’t worth the effort.
Bobby Deerfield: LAME
I sure agree with you, I saw this movie when it was first released and was disappointed.
ReplyDeleteBoredom indeed. I saw this hot mess at the theater & actually dozed off at one point for like 5 minutes during it. That might actually have improved it for me!
ReplyDelete