Arguably Robert Altman’s
strangest movie—a high standard, given his eccentric career—Brewster McCloud hit theaters shortly
after the idiosyncratic filmmaker scored a major hit with M*A*S*H, but this picture was far too bizarre to enjoy the broad
acceptance of its predecessor. In fact, Brewster
McCloud shuns narrative conventions so capriciously that it seems likely
Altman took taken perverse pleasure in confounding viewers. Consider the
willfully weird storyline: Nerdy young man Brewster McCloud (Bud Cort) lives
illegally in a workroom beneath the Houston Astrodome, and he passes his days
studying avian physiology while building a pair of mechanical wings so he can
eventually fly away to some unknown location.
Three women in his life
accentuate the peculiarity of Brewster’s existence. Hope (Jennifer Salt) is a
groupie who visits Brewster’s lair and climaxes while watching him exercise;
Suzanne (Shelley Duvall, in her first movie) is a spaced-out Astrodome tour
guide who becomes Brewster’s accomplice and lover; and Louise (Sally
Kellerman), who might or might not be a real person, is Brewster’s guardian
angel, subverting everyone who tries to impede Brewster’s progress.
This being
an Altman film, the story also involves about a dozen other significant
characters. For instance, there’s Abraham Wright (Stacy Keach), a
wheelchair-bound geezer who makes his money charging merciless rents to seniors
at rest homes, and Frank Shaft (Michael Murphy), a supercop investigating a
series of murders that may or may not have been committed by Brewster and/or
Louise. (Each of the victims is marked by bird defecation on the face.) Among
the film’s other threads is a recurring vignette featuring The Lecturer (Rene
Auberjonois), a weird professor/scientist who speaks directly to the audience
about bird behavior while slowly transforming into a bird.
Although it’s more
of a comedy than anything else, Brewster
McCloud incorporates tropes from coming-of-age dramas, police thrillers,
and romantic tragedies, and the whole thing is presented in Altman’s signature
style of seemingly dissociated vignettes fused by ironic cross-cutting and
overlapping soundtrack elements. This is auteur filmmaking at its most extreme,
with a director treating his style like a narrative component—and yet at the
same time, Brewster McCloud is so
irreverently lowbrow that Kellerman’s character drives a car with the vanity
license plate “BRD SHT.” Similarly, Salt’s character expresses an orgasm by
repeatedly pumping a mustard dispenser so condiments squirt onto a table.
Appraising Brewster McCloud via normal
criteria is pointless, since Doran William Cannon’s script is designed for
maximum strangeness, and since none of the actors was tasked with crafting a
realistic individual. A lot of what happens onscreen is arresting, and the
movie is cut briskly enough that it moves along, but one’s tolerance for this
experiment is entirely contingent on one’s appetite for mean-spirited whimsy.
That said, Brewster McCloud is
completely unique, even for an era of rampant cinematic innovation, and novelty
is, to some degree, its own virtue. (Available at
WarnerArchive.com)
Brewster McCloud: FREAKY
This synopsis makes it sound insane and not in a good way.
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