Historically, only a certain species of writer has been sanctioned to bash these things out for a studio paycheque, and you can still feel the sway Chayevsky held within Hollywood circles in this script's indulgence of unkillable repeated lines ("crusty yet benign", "an angry prophet denouncing the hypocrisies of our times"). If his best-known phrasing retains some potency as a shout into the void, there's not much else here worthy of praise or salvage. The second hour gets bloated and hysterical with lowest common denominator programming that never came to pass (soothsayers on the news, a reality show about a Symbionese Liberation Army knock-off) and then there's the altogether icky relationship between William Holden and Faye Dunaway's grasping, neurotic exec (who only gets off when she's talking ratings, a musty locker-room joke). The warning that corporations weren't doing much to protect the mental health of their employees might have been revelatory at the time, but seems way too overblown in this framing - all that BELLOWING - to merit close heeding. Finch got the Oscar posthumously, having stuck in there for so long; he is, granted, the one actor in this ensemble who does seem to have got their head around the levels of muttering and spluttering Chayevsky demanded. More telling, I would argue, is the number of performers - Dunaway, Robert Duvall, Ned Beatty - who, having been subtly terrific in other New Hollywood ventures, look terribly awkward, even outright hammy when asked to channel the playwright's relentless, bilious logorrhea.
Network returns to selected cinemas from Friday.
No comments:
Post a Comment