| Theres
        Something About Mary
 By Ervell E.
        Menezes
 THERES so much I heard about
        Theres Something About Mary that I was quite
        disappointed after seeing the film. But then I
        hadnt seen Dumb and Dumber by the Farrelly Brothers
        Peter and Bob so I was in no position to surmise what the
        fare might be. The title for one thing, is catchy.   The duet playing the music is
        also cute and the line goes Theres something about
        Mary that you dont know. It is like the Greek
        chorus and comments on the film but the humour is weak.
        At least not my type of humour. It is far too slapstick
        and at times base and even vulgar. Its in the Jim
        Carrey mould and Ben Stiller who plays Ted, the born
        loser who is trying to revive his romance for his high
        school date, could well emulate Carrey who by now has
        realised that he must move on to something more plausible
        and hence his induction in The Truman Show.
 Yes, comely Cameron Diaz
        is Mary but not all that she does is funny. Or for that
        matter romantic. And shuttling between Matt Dillon and
        Ben Stiller is like being between the devil and the deep
        sea. Ive seen Matt Dillon in a film with Gene
        Hackman and quite a good job he did then. But if
        hes going to ham about it senseless comedies like
        this hes likely to ruin a promising career.  "Six Days, Seven
        Nights" is much better. In fact it is slotted as the
        Valentine Day release even though the romance is an
        April-November type. After all you cant expect an
        ageing Harrison Ford to play a young lover. But the
        subject, one of being stranded on a desert island with a
        woman , must have been the day-dream of many a youth.
        Hollywood too has cashed in on it Blue Legoon (Brooke
        Shields and Christopher Atkins) and Castaway (Oliver
        Reed) readily come to mind.  Comedy has to take
        precedence over romance. So, when magazine editor Robin
        Monroe (Anne Heche) is forced by circumstance to spend
        almost a week with hard-drinking, simple-living freight
        plane pilot Quinn Harris (Harrison Ford) it is not
        exactly a made-for-each-other couple. In fact Robin is on
        a holiday with her rather straight-jacket boy-friend
        Frank Martin (David Schwimmer) who doesnt hesitate
        to pop the question on their arrival in the South Pacific
        island, when she is forced to go to Tahiti on an urgent
        assignment. Thats how she is thrown together with
        Quinn.  Now in a film of this
        nature the boy-friend has to be a dud. After all, he has
        to lose the girl. Also the hero and the heroine have to
        be incompatible, always arguing with each other or
        fighting over little things. That helps the chemistry,
        they say. But speaking of Harrison Ford in his salad days
        I remember one of the finest romances Ive seen
        Hanover Street has Ford in the lead role as a World War
        II pilot who falls in love with a married woman played to
        perfection by Leslie-Ann Downe. What a film! Im not a big fan
        of director Ivan Reitman whose Ghostbusters was not
        really my cup of tea. His Dave in which Kevin Kline plays
        a very human American President is better. Here he does a
        good job and this is mainly because of a witty screenplay
        by Michael Browning and two very talented performers.
        Ford of course is tried and tested but Anne Heche, whom
        we first saw alongside Tommy Lee Jones in Volcano and who
        seems to be going from strength to strength.  The anything-is-possible
        genre which Hollywood thrives on these days, helps. If
        the plane crashes, you that somehow before the curtain
        come down it will be mended. It may not be as plausible
        as say The Flight of the Phoenix, a saga of survival in
        the wilderness but then it was made in the 1960s and will
        remain a classic. In todays films credibility is
        not an important ingredient.  This is what co-producer
        Roger Birnbaum says about picking Ford: "The reason
        I thought Harrison would be perfect for the part is that
        he conveys all the qualities of the part required 
        wit, manliness and confidence". And that he surely
        does.  Harrison Ford fans will
        surely like him better in films like Witness (with Kelly
        McGillis) and Frantic (directed by Roman Polanski) or
        even action-packed thrillers like Clear and Present
        Danger or Patriot Games. But this casting only shows that
        Ford has had his day and must be less physical. And in
        this he surely succeeds.  The arithmetic of the
        title Six Days, Seven Nights doesnt seem right and
        for all its predictability it is worth watching.
        Youll also see that Hollywood seems to prefer
        skimpier females (Gwyneth Parltow is another) these days.
        Anne Heche plays the Janet Leigh part in Psycho but more
        of that next time.  
 This
        feature was published on March 21, 1999
 
 
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