Old Boyfriends
is a painfully dull movie made by a number of people who should have known
better. Screenwriting brothers Leonard Schrader and Paul Schrader, who are best
known separately and apart for making dark dramas with complicated male
protagonists, ventured way outside their comfort zones to create this
unconvincing story about a troubled young woman working through an identity
crisis by tracking down her exes. Talia Shire, who was at this point in her
career embarking on a series of shockingly unsuccessful star vehicles in
between appearing in Rocky sequels, delivers what can only be described
as a non-performance. Bland to the extreme of barely registering on camera, she
alternates between moping, whining, and fading into the woodwork while other
actors do all the heavy lifting. Also, there’s a reason first-time director
Joan Tewksbury, best known as the screenwriter of Robert Altman’s Nashville
(1975), gravitated to television after this movie tanked; her inability to generate
and sustain interest is stunning. Even the movie’s score is misguided, because composer
David Shire contributes music so gloomy and overwrought you’d think he was
generating accompaniment for a Holocaust saga. What little notoriety Old Boyfriends has probably stems from
John Belushi’s appearance in a supporting role. (Shire’s character visits two
exes, played by Richard Jordan and Belushi, before visiting the younger
brother, played by Keith Carradine, of a third ex.) Belushi incarnates a
dramatic riff on his Animal House character of an obnoxious man-child,
and the meanness he channels into his performance almost brings the movie to
life for a while. He also sings “Jailhouse Rock,” just a year before he
performed the same song in The Blues Brothers. Alas, Shire’s vapidity
and the script’s contrived rhythms prevent even the Belushi scenes from
soaring. In fact, nearly the only segment of movie that really works is a fun
but peripheral bit with Buck Henry as a laconic private eye.
Old Boyfriends: LAME
Just watched this to see why it was so hated by everybody ... On the one hand I think her character was supposed to be sort of "walking in a dream" and with flattened affect due to past trauma ... However, I readily admit that it scarcely excuses the fact that that whole film seems to be taking place underwater, or tranqued-out on valium or whatever, without due cohesion! ... I found it pretty watchable as a weird failure though! ... And it's also interesting to note that it seems to have been a direct antecedent to Jarmusch's "Broken Flowers" -- also quite flawed ...
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