Picture, if you dare, the
disturbing images that open Carny.
Gary Busey, in all his glorious weirdness, sits in a dark room before a mirror,
a single light illuminating his face from above, as he applies black, red, and
white clown makeup, all the while bulging his eyes and baring his gigantic
teeth to test the progress of his transformation. Insinuating music underscores
the scene. And that’s how it is with Carny—strange and unpleasant things happen without much context. At varying points, Carny is funny, humane, insightful,
sexy, and terrifying. Yet the film is also dull, pointless, and sloppy. Is it
a horror movie about violent drifters who work in traveling carnivals? Is it a
low-rent romantic triangle involving two grown men battling over the affections
of a teenager? Is it a melodrama about outsider
artists facing irrelevance thanks to shifting social mores? The
answer to each of those questions is yes—but Carny is a disappointment nonetheless, because the film is made conventionally as to require a strong central storyline, which it lacks.
One
can’t help but wonder whether producer, cowriter, and leading man Robbie
Robertson—a genuine rock star known for his tenure as the Band’s guitarist
and principal songwriter—imagined collaborating on this film with his friend
Martin Scorsese. Although Carny
exists way outside Scorsese’s preferred urban-crime milieu, surely Scorsese
would have known how to wrangle the film’s ideas and textures into a coherent
script. Clearly, Robertson did not. At its core, Carny spins a dishearteningly simple yarn. When the Great American
Carnival rolls into a small town, 18-year-old waitress Donna (Jodie Foster) becomes
infatuated with Frankie (Busey), a “geek” who spends his nights inside a cage
above a water tank, taunting rubes so they’ll pay to dunk him. Donna
leaves home to, as the saying goes, run away with the circus. This causes
friction with Frankie’s best friend, Patch (Robertson), the carnival’s fixer.
(He breaks up fights and pays bribes to officials in towns the carnival visits.)
The movie also has about a dozen subplots, some of which receive no more than
a moment or two of screen time, and eventually the Donna business turns sordid when
she becomes a dancer in the carny’s girlie show.
There’s a lot of everything in
Carny, as evidenced by the massive supporting
cast: Elisha Cook Jr., Meg Foster, Kenneth MacMillan, Bill McKinney, Tim
Thomerson, Fred Ward, Craig Wasson, and more. The film also bursts with special
people portraying sideshow performers. All of these characters wander through
engrossing vignettes, so the plot sometimes feels like an interruption. Not
helping matters is Alex North’s truly awful musical score, which turns
unhelpfully comedic during dark moments. You’d think Robertson would have at
least gotten the music right in his capacity as producer, especially since his
acting is naturalistic but forgettable. Busey is unhinged whenever he’s in geek
mode, and he brings surprising tenderness to quiet scenes. Foster, meanwhile,
delivers an atypically indifferent performance, but she’s quite beguiling here—as in her other 1980 film, Foxes,
Foster seemed determined to demonstrate after a three-year screen hiatus that
she was no longer a juvenile.
Carny:
FUNKY
The soundtrack album has a picture of North and Robertson on the back having a smoke.
ReplyDeleteAs usual, excellent review and awesome writing Sir Peter. Just thought I would mention to everyone that an excellent quality up of this exists on You Tube as I saved it several years ago and watch once in a blue moon. No clue as to why it's never been taken down but here's the link - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQw4NOgvxT4&t=14s&index=6&list=PLVwzJOQOe7ZgWWeB3X9RUyZDT_AMxHcCP
ReplyDeleteMy two cents: Busey is hilarious with his antics inside the cage. My personal opinion on Robbie Robertson is a bit strong, I think he's one of the few rock stars on celluloid that should never have stepped in front of a camera, much less have production reins...The Horror lol!