+ another review of Any Given Sunday by Tobias Peterson
"Holy mackerel that is football!"
Oliver Stone's movies usually seem more complicated than they are. Partly this comes from his evolving style, from the curiously romantic realism of Platoon, to the assaultive ding-battiness of Natural Born Killers, to the debased lunacy of U-Turn. But mostly it comes from his obsession with a single theme: brutality. Or more precisely, how brutality becomes morality.
This theme shows up in many forms in Stone's work, ranging from
the U.S. government's many historical deceits, to patriarchy's
horrors disguised as genetic fate, to the madness of media and
commercial culture. What seems to allow his repeated return to
this theme is the bizarre self-image he's constructed over the
years. The man has nerve and passion, and above all, a sense of
mission (it's not whether he came to believe his own superlative
press surrounding Platoon, or if he came to Hollywood equipped
with his legendary arrogance). In any event, Stone is a man
committed: he finds his target the brutality of war, politics,
media and slams it to the ground. Repeatedly.
Such slamming is most evident in the mainstream movies. In
Scarface (written by Stone and directed by Brian DePalma),
Horatio-Alger-esque drug dealer Tony Montana (Al Pacino) is
violent for a living, but goes most wrong when he sells out his
friends and family for kingpin status. Platoon's
protagonist/Stone-stand-in Chris (Charlie Sheen), learns that in
the face of war, intra-platoon loyalty constitutes its own
morality. Born on the Fourth of July's paraplegic Vietnam
veteran Ron Kovic (Tom Cruise) ends up joining the Democratic
Party, seeking a moral end to the relentless brutality he faces at war and at home. But it's as if the film can't quite
represent the happy ending it imagines: when Kovic goes to give
his much-heralded Convention speech, the screen literally fades
to white (underlining that what he has to say will necessarily
undo everything else the movie has hammered home about the evils
of politics).
It's Stone's overtly maniacal movies the ones that people tend
to dislike and disparage that are the most provocative
concerning this relationship between violence and morality. In
NBK, Mickey and Mallory (Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis)
are the most despicable of characters, mass murderers on a spree,
exalted by ratings-hungry media. In a word, they are the Ur-Team
Players, delivering to expectations, signing autographs, spinning
their own stories with a grim expertise. They are the consummate
rockstar-monsters, vivaciously and stunningly brutal. And when
they come out on top, they are the Team Personified, they serve
the tabloids, the fans, and the detractors all at the same time.
U-Turn is the filmmaker's most disturbing articulation of the
logical ends of U.S. culture's worship of individualism and
violence (despite and because of the screwy boy-bonding at the
violent climax). Nick Nolte, Jennifer Lopez, and the astounding
Sean Penn (who has since described Stone as a farm animal) tussle
over money, power, and sex, until they're left with only raw
meanness.
An early movie, Salvador, delivers loony-tunes journalist
Richard Boyle (James Woods at his gonzo best) behaving like the
biggest speed-freak-asshole you could ever imagine, the ugly
American redux, plainly not understanding what's going on around
him (thinking he can save a Salvadoran woman just because he
loves her). Boyle is initially so quick and relentless in his
raging against U.S. imperialism, commercialism, and me-ism, that
you feel betrayed when he turns around at film's end to embrace
national pride and patriotism. When you think about it, though,
Boyle's rant is one of the clearest manifestations of Stone's
love-hate relationship with that All-American desire to be the
best team player. Boyle is looking for that moment of grace,
that instant when your life makes sense and you feel part of
something bigger than yourself. In Stone's ornery humanism, you
achieve this pseudo-redemption when you play for the right team.
So here he's arrived, finally, at his definitive team movie. Any
Given Sunday starts out looking like it's going to critique the
hell out of that berserker activity known to most folks as
football. It opens with a horrific battle scene (Platoon
brought home, and, by the way, and didn't Peter Davis's 1975
documentary Hearts and Minds already expose this nasty
connection?). Against a backdrop of straining cheerleaders, fuzzy
mascots, and fans in grotesque body-paint, the (fictionalized)
Miami Sharks wear all-black uniforms (how metaphorical!) and
crash headlong in crash into the Other Team. The camera zigzags,
the cuts come fast and hard, the reaction shots show angry
coaches (Al Pacino as Miami headguy Tony D'Amato, Jim Brown as
defensive coordinator Montezuma Monroe) and anxious wives (the
white ones in one section, the black ones in another). Two
quarterbacks go down in quick succession, including veteran Cap
Rooney (Dennis Quaid). Desperate, Tony sends in the third man,
Willie Beamen (Jamie Foxx), who promptly pukes on the field.
Willie's vomiting becomes the film's running joke, implying the
kid's intense desire to do well. The drama seems to be this: is
this desire a matter of self-interest or... team-interest? And
it's in this tension that the violence-morality dynamic is played
out.
Structured as a series of dysfunctional father-son relationships
(technically, Cameron Diaz is the daughter of a team owner who
has inherited her dead dad's legacy, but she functions as a son
here), Any Given Sunday seems distracted by its own excesses,
which are less stylistic (the cinematographer is a first-timer,
Salvatore Totino, the four editors include one Stone-veteran,
Thomas Nordberg, and three FNGs) than narrative. Covering all
kinds of cultural ground familial tensions, vulgar
consumerism, racism, sexism, drug abuse, alcoholism, domestic
violence, medical ethics, and the general obscenity of media the movie gallops along like it has lots to say, but can never
quite find the words to say it. Of course, everyone yells a lot,
but the movie's most interesting insights don't come through in
the overwrought dialogue.
The movie is hoisted on something of a petard, wanting
simultaneously to excoriate and celebrate football. On the one
hand, the movie calls out football for its corporate brutality
(shades of Spike Lee's He Got Game), on another, Any Given
Sunday proclaims football a religious ritual, wherein fans are
treated to heroic displays of talent and teamwork. It's this team
business that finally does the film in: it's ridiculously happy
ending is achieved when the most soulless mercenaries learn their
hard lessons and do the right thing by the team.
Tony's journey of self-discovery exacts costs from everyone
around him: he does battle with his team's owner and general
manager Christina (Diaz), showboater Beamen, star running back
Julian Washington (LL Cool J, stealing scenes again), dorky and
ubiquitous reporter Jack (John C. McGinley, survivor of five
Stone films), newbie high tech defensive coordinator Nick (Aaron
Echkhart), and sleazy team doctor Harvey Mandrake (as in root?),
played by Woods in relative slow-motion. Tony's dilemma is not
only that he's old and tired (he doesn't "get" the superstar
mentality, the fact that Willie makes a rap video to sell sports
bars), but also that he has regrets.
As you see by the pictures in his fancy home, he once had a wife
and daughter that he "gave up" for the game. It's worth noting
that the sole character to call him out in a way that sticks is
his old boss's widow and new boss's mom, Margaret (Ann-Margret),
who spends most of her screentime being drunk and fiddling with
her little white pooches. Still, in vino veritas and all: during
a quiet moment, she tells Tony that he's been a "monster," and
darn if that insight doesn't come back to you, while you're
sinking into your seat during the 2 hours and 40 minutes that the
movie pounds away.
Other than Margaret's moment, however, the film does a standard
Stonian job on its women. Christina needs to learn her proper
place and to respect Tony's experience. Tony finds comfort with a
really nice, air headed hooker (Elizabeth Berkley), who has a lot
of wigs and tells him a few times how good he is. But the major
ball buster here is Cap's wife (Lauren Holly). When she hauls off
and belts him for even suggesting that he should quit the game,
it's one of those dark movie moments when a filmmaker's inner
workings seem laid out. Ouch.
The sensible woman in the mix seems to be Willie's longtime
girlfriend Vanessa (Lela Rochon), who leaves him just as soon as
he gets too big-headed and starts pushing her around. True, she
seems a little too ready take him back when he plays remorseful
for a minute, but the film leaves hope that she might maintain
her sanity and reject his spoiled-kid-acting ass. Willie occupies
a difficult place in the film, for he's right about the racism in
the football business but so cocky that you never feel asked to
believe him. In the film's outrageous scene, Willie's eating
Coach's jambalaya while the Charleton Heston version of Ben Hur
plays on a huge tv screen: as the men debate the racism in the
league point (lots of black RBs and defensive linemen, very few
QBs and coaches, no owners, though how Tony imagines a
counterpoint is actually unclear), you see Chuck Heston on the
slave ship. Heroic or beaten down? You decide.
For all the backstage grumping and battling, the games are where
the film locates its major action and metaphors. In the locker
rooms, the players are iced and dosed with all kinds of speed and
painkillers, at home they drink and smoke themselves into what
seems a well-deserved oblivion. The point is, the money and the
pain are too much. Willie's bad-boyness emerges when he starts
calling his own plays, flouting the play book and traditions (his
play is so good, however, that it inspires a sports announcer
played by Stone himself to proclaim, "Holy mackerel that is
football!"). Washington, his eyes on his yardage record and the
endorsements contracts that come with it, fights a lot in the
locker room, at parties, on the sidelines with Willie. This
repetition may be the film's way of avoiding racism on the team
per se, but it only underlines the fact that the black players
are divided to be conquered. During one game, DMX's "My Niggas"
thunders on the soundtrack, seeming to comment on the
simultaneous camaraderie and abusiveness of what you're watching.
Any Given Sunday never does figure out what it wants to say.
Instead, it retreats from any and all critiques of this awful
business and does the great hurrah! For the Big Game, coach and
all the players work as a team to claw their way out of the hell
they've been in (after Tony's rousing halftime speech advising
same), and even mom and the wayward daughter bond with the
poochies. The cheerleaders jump and split. Even the sports
announcers cheer. By this time, you're just feeling exhausted.
Brutality is morality? Sure, sure. Just roll credits. Please.