A bad movie that would
have been so much better had its big scenes taken flight, Sheila Levine Is Dead and Living in New York is admirable for being
a glossy studio movie about the problems faced by women in a time of changing
gender roles. Furthermore, the movie represented a terrific opportunity for
comedic actress Jeannie Berlin co capitalize on her breakthrough performance in
The Heartbreak Kid (1972), which was
directed by Berlin’s mother, Elaine May. Alas, the dexterity and vulnerability
that Berlin displayed in The Heartbreak
Kid fails to impress in this context. Playing a sad-sack Pennsylvanian who
experiences romantic woes while traveling with a fast crowd in New York City,
Berlin comes across as pathetic instead of poignant. Worse, watching her
character vacillate in unbelievable ways—one minute she’s a doormat, the next
she’s a tough cookie—is painfully dull. The story couldn’t be simpler. Sheila
(Berlin) moves to New York in order to get away from her (cliché alert!)
oppressive Jewish mother. Sheila takes a room with flaky actress Katie (Rebecca
Dinna Smith), who pushes Sheila to shed her inhibitions. The movie starts its
slow spiral into nothingness during a scene of Sheila following Katie’s advice
by “dancing” with a mop in order to emulate current dance moves; what should
have been an explosion of physical-comedy joy is instead a sad and lonely
vignette. While attending a party, Sheila meets a young doctor, Sam Stoneman
(Roy Scheider), and she sleeps with him on their first date. Upon realizing
that she had a one-night stand, Sheila becomes enraged—and then spends the rest
of the movie trying to win a permanent place in Sam’s heart, even as he becomes
romantically involved with Katie. Based on a novel by Gail Parent, who earned
fame as a writer on The Carol Burnett
Show in the late ’60s, Sheila Levine
Is Dead doesn’t work as a character study, a comedy, or a contemplation of
social issues. It’s a romantic melodrama disguised as a women’s picture, and
it’s a slog to watch, even with the always-vibrant Scheider effectively
sketching a character who realizes he’s an asshole but is reluctant to change
his ways.
Sheila Levine is Dead and Living in New York: LAME
I agree Berlin came off as too whiny here, but was terrific in 'The Heartbreak Kid', which despite its flaws was better than its 2007 Ben Stiller remake.
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