The same year that Mel Gibson first played Mad
Max, in the film of the same name, he starred in this very different feature, a
sticky-sweet romance about a middle-aged woman who falls for a mentally
challenged fellow 20 years her junior. While not an especially interesting
movie, thanks to the sluggish pacing and trite storyline, Tim has some
novelty simply because of Gibson’s presence. While his innate charm gets him
through, the actor is as mediocre in Tim as he is assured in Mad Max.
This says a lot about the importance of synchronicity between actor and role. In
the ensuing years, Gibson’s capacity for real-life anger has become legendary,
so it’s now easy to recognize why he simulated Mad Max’s sociopathic angst so
effectively. Yet the title role in Tim called for an actor who could
convey pure innocence, and that particular quality seemed to exist slightly
outside Gibson’s wheelhouse circa the late ’70s.
Throughout Tim, he diligently
strips free of affect and guile, but in doing so, Gibson comes across more like
a needy puppy dog than a believable human being. It’s also distracting that Gibson
is so extraordinarily attractive—whether he’s prancing about in tiny swim
trunks or working in short-shorts and a tank top, Gibson looks like he’s in a
homoerotic music video, rather than a serious dramatic film. So while he’s not
bad in the film, per se, he’s just slightly miscast—which has an impact on the
overall project, since he is, after all, portraying the title character.
That
said, Tim is an essentially respectable enterprise. U.S. actress Piper
Laurie, the picture of midlife elegance, stars as Mary Horton, an American-born
professional living in Australia. One day, she spots handsome young laborer Tim
(Gibson) doing yardwork next door. When her own gardener calls in sick, Mary
hires Tim as a handyman, eventually extending his work to her beach house as
well as her primary residence. Because Tim is simple-minded, Mary’s burgeoning
affection for the young man is initially quasi-maternal in nature. Yet her
patronage pleases Tim’s blue-collar parents, who fear Tim has no prospects in
life. Then, after both of Tim’s parents fall ill, Mary’s role in the young
man’s life becomes more central. She denies the physical aspects of her
attraction to Tim until the circumstances of their lives change, so much of the
film’s drama stems from Mary’s angst over whether to get intimate with a man
who has the mind of a child.
Based on a novel by Australian author Colleen
McCullough—who famously revisited the forbidden-love genre for The Thorn
Birds, which became a massive U.S. miniseries—Tim is gentle to a
fault. There’s very little dramatic conflict, the movie is padded with flat and
repetitive scenes of contented people enjoying each other’s company, and the
gooey music score makes Tim seem like a Hallmark greeting card come to
life. Still, Laurie lends more than a touch of class, Gibson’s megawatt
charisma is on full display, and the Australian locations are lovely. Call it a
draw.
Tim: FUNKY
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