At the end of Paul Thomas Anderson’s Inherent Vice, LA Detective Christian “Bigfoot” Bjornsen (Josh
Brolin) who sports a flattop busts down the front door of the private eye Larry “Doc”
Sportella's (Joacquin Phoenix) house. In Anderson’s The Master Phoenix played Freddie Quell, the primitive on
whom Lancaster Dodd (Phillip Seymour Hofmann), the L. Ron Hubbard type figure of the title, will attempt to work his cure. In Inherent
Vice, Phoenix as a dopper investigator has a similar animal energy, but the
goodness, as well as his potential a Christian soldier, is less camouflaged. Bigfoot puffs on Doc’s joint, then eats the roach, and his whole tray of
marijuana leaves, Zig Zag papers and all. “Are you OK, brother,” Doc
asks. “I’m not your brother,” Bigfoot says, “But you could use a keeper,” says
Doc. Anderson’s There Will Be Blood
was based on an Upton Sinclair novel and Inherent
Vice is adapted from the Pynchon. The
Master which was about the attempt to change human beings, wasn’t
based on anyone’s novel. However, in revisiting the origins of scientology, one of the most perverse forms of therapy
ever conceived, in a supra-realistic setting (reminiscent in some ways of the vertiginous realism Kazan employed in East of Eden), the movie exuded the density and intensity of a great
l9th century novel— like say Zola’s Germinal. But Inherent Vice is neither a movie with novelistic leanings nor simply a good adaptation (nor by the way are it or any of Anderson’s other aforementioned films, period pieces--though Inherent Vice and The Master do have the courage to sport the now anomalous and forbidden sight of women with actual pubic hair). It's a novel in film form, a complex modernist work inspired by the work equally complex writer. Mickey Wolfmann (Eric Roberts), a realtor
who’s building a massive development called Channel View Estates surrounds
himself with members of the Aryan Brotherhood, despite his Jewish background.
He gets kidnapped and tells Doc “I made people pay money for shelter and all
along I didn’t realize, it was supposed to be free.” Shasta Fay Hepworth
(Katherine Waterston), Doc’s former girlfriend, who has run off with Mickey says
about him, “Mickey was so powerful he could almost make you feel invisible.”
Golden Fang Enterprises presided over by Dr. Rudy Blatnoyd (Martin Short), a dentist, is a
drug cartel that runs on the principle of "vertical integration" and owns a death ship (a la B. Traven) called The Golden Fang. They provide
the drugs and profit from their addicted clientele’s stay at the rehab they run. The locutions and
conceits come fast and furious as does the unpredictable soundtrack which
finishes with Chuck Jackson’s 60’s soul classic “Any Day Now,” rather than a
more predictably druggy sound. So much is going on that you feel you're on the defensive, intellectually at least. You almost
wish this movie version of the Pynchon novel were a book whose pages you could
flip back and forth in at will.
Monday, December 29, 2014
Inherent Vice
Labels:
East of Eden,
Inherent Vice,
L. Ron Hubbard,
The Master,
There Will Be Blood,
Zola
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