Having been exposed to the image countless times
during my years as a video-store drone, since it was replicated on the movie’s
VHS sleeve, the poster shot for Goin’
South has always irked me. At first glance, it’s a striking shot of star
Jack Nicholson smiling wickedly while his face is framed by a noose. Upon close
inspection, however, it’s clear that Nicholson is holding the noose in place to
achieve the effect. The intended illusion is thus made and dispelled
simultaneously. And so it goes for the movie itself, because throughout Goin’ South, Nicholson’s techniques as
actor and director are so apparent that the movie feels laborious when it
should feel effortless. After all, Goin’
South is supposed to be a comedy—and a romantic comedy, no less.
Set in
Texas during the Wild West era, the picture stars Nicholson as Henry Moon, an
excitable but not particularly bright outlaw. Captured by lawmen including
Sheriff Kyle (Richard Bradford) and Deputy Towfield (Christopher Lloyd), Moon
is strung up for hanging. However, thanks to an arcane law allowing unmarried
women to save condemned men by agreeing to marry them, young landowner Julie
Tate (Mary Steenbugen) becomes Moon’s bride. Having inherited a ranch from her
father, she needs a man and likes the idea of being able to use Moon for a
slave since he owes her his life.
Even though it’s rather convoluted, this
premise could easily have generated an opposites-attract farce. Unfortunately,
nearly every element in Goin’ South
misses the mark. The screenplay meanders through dull and repetitive scenes.
Supporting characters lack dimension. Plot twists emerge arbitrarily as opposed
to organically. Nicholson’s direction is fuzzy, so scenes lack internal rhythm
and the tone of the piece wobbles between broad comedy and subtle satire. Worst
of all, the performances are terribly out of sync with each other. Steenburgen,
appearing in her first movie, mostly communicates gentle nuances, while
Nicholson goes way, way over the top.
In fact, it’s probably fair to describe
the actor’s work in Goin’ South as
some of the worst acting in his career. Whether he’s frowning with an open
mouth to imply stupidity or widening his eyes to indicate lunacy, Nicholson is
silly and tiresome in nearly every scene; virtually the only clever touch he
employs is speaking at various intervals with a phlegmatic knot in his voice,
suggesting a character for whom language does not come easily. And to say the
leads lack chemistry is a huge understatement. It’s also irritating to see two
potent comic actors—John Belushi (another actor making his big-screen debut in Goin’ South) and Danny DeVito—relegated
to insignificant supporting roles. Really the only member of the Goin’ South gang whose work is
consistently praiseworthy is cinematographer Nestor Almendros, who paints most
scenes with an appealing golden glow.
Goin’
South: FUNKY
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