• LAT Home
  • |
  • My LATimes
  • |
  • Print Edition
  • |
  • All Sections
  • More Classifieds
  • |
  • Foreclosure Sale
  • |
  • Real Estate
  • |
  • Cars.com
  • |
  • Jobs
Los Angeles Times The Guide

Search LATimes

  • Restaurants
  • Bars & Clubs
  • Events
  • Music
  • Art & Museums
  • Theater & Stage
  • Outdoors
  • Movies
  • TV
  • Neighborhoods
 
calendarlive

Movies

In Movies

  • Movie Reviews
  • Movie News

Partners

Classifieds

  • Careers
  • Cars
  • Homes
  • Rentals
  • Times Guides
  • Newspaper Ads
  • Grocery Coupons
  • Personals

May 23, 1997 E-mail story   Print  

MOVIE REVIEW

Schizopolis

Soderbergh's 'Schizopolis' Tries to Be Too Many Things
 
Find Movie Showtimes & Tickets
Search by Title:
OR
By Zip Code:

Reader Reviews
-Forever Strong
-The New Twenty
-Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story
-Shoot on Sight
-Hounddog
-Garden Party

Times Reviews
-'District 13: Ultimatum' is a showcase for stunts, which isn't a bad thing
-Brit Noir series to start at Nuart on Friday
-Review: 'Dear John'
-'From Paris With Love'
-'The Last Station'
-Mo'Nique won't hit the campaign trail
-'Fish Tank' is an elegy on teen poverty and desperation
-'Edge of Darkness'
-'A Town Called Panic'
-'Saint John of Las Vegas' veers off the road despite Steve Buscemi
-'When in Rome'
-'When in Rome' info


 Movie Reviews
'District 13: Ultimatum' is a showcase for stunts, which isn't a bad thing
Brit Noir series to start at Nuart on Friday
Review: 'Dear John'
'From Paris With Love'
'The Last Station'
Movie Reviews section >

 Most E-mailed
'Crazy Heart'
'Crash'
'Up in the Air'
> more e-mailed stories

By KEVIN THOMAS, TIMES STAFF WRITER


Friday May 23, 1997

ADVERTISEMENT
     "Schizopolis" represents a minor act of self-indulgence on the part of the sometimes eccentric Steven Soderbergh but results in major tedium for the viewer. The gifted filmmaker, who made a splashy debut with "sex, lies, and videotape," this time is relentlessly zany without being funny. It's as if Soderbergh, who also stars in dual roles, were out to put a surreal spin on the earlier film but without sufficient inspiration to make it work.
     The first third of the film is especially insufferable as his Fletcher Munson, an extravagantly neurotic employee of a famous self-help guru, struggles with the assignment of writing a speech for his boss. In the meantime, Soderbergh, who in appearance could pass as Woody Harrelson's brother, piles on all the nonsense vignettes and subplots he can come up with to little positive effect.
     The film gets better when Munson discovers a carbon copy of himself, a dentist, who in turn is having an affair with his--Munson's--wife (Betsy Brantley). To top it off, a woman who is her double turns up at the dentist's office as a new patient.
     Actually, Soderbergh is on to something that kicks in but too late to matter much. When Munson passes himself as the dentist to his wife, he gains a unique opportunity to see himself as she does--a hopelessly preoccupied individual. This doubling allows Soderbergh to suggest how couples need literally to get outside themselves to recharge a marriage gone stale.
     In his own playing and that of the lovely, poised Brantley, Soderbergh succeeds quite well in this. But you suspect that he's afraid this concern may play as too obvious and banal. He may therefore feel he must distract us with all manner of dreary slapstick and asides. This is too bad because, as he has proved in his criminally neglected 1993 second feature, "King of the Hill," about an abandoned boy coping in the Depression, he can bring terrific poignancy and immediacy to the straightforward narrative.
     To be sure, Soderbergh suggests that we're living in a universe of mind-boggling absurdity while so craving recognition and self-respect that we not only spawn phony prophets but also individuals hungering for the attention that attempting to assassinate them would bring. Soderbergh has lots to say but this time seems to lack the confidence to express himself seriously.


Schizopolis, 1997. Unrated. A Northern Arts Entertainment release. Writer-director-cinematographer Steven Soderbergh. Producer John Hardy. Editor Sarah Flack. Music Cliff Martinez, Joseph Wilkins, Mark Mangini, Harry Garfield. Running time: 1 hour, 36 minutes. Steven Soderbergh as Fletcher Munson. Betsy Brantley as Mrs. Munson/Attractive Woman No. 2. David Jensen as Elmo Oxygen. Eddie Jemison as Nameless Numberheadman.





To order a reprint of this article, please click here.

 
 
 

More in The Guide

Restaurants | Bars & Clubs | Events | Music | Art | Performing Arts | Movies | TV |

More on LATimes.com

California/Local | National | World | Sports | Business | Entertainment | Travel | Health | Autos | Real Estate

Classifieds

CareerBuilder.com | Cars.com | Apartments.com | OpenHouses.com | FSBO (For Sale by Owner)

Partners

ViveloHoy | KTLA | Metromix | Zap2it
Los Angeles Times
202 West 1st Street, Los Angeles, California, 90012
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertise | Home Delivery | Permissions | Help & Services | Contact | Site Map