Pitching
The story of the angst-ridden salesman struggling with his past,
coping with regret and searching for meaning in life is a tale
that audiences have heard and seen many times before. Multiple
versions of this tale have been produced, many originating as a
play and subsequently gaining release as a motion picture.
Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman is the first and most
famous of these, chronicling the failures of Willy Loman,
initially as a theatrical production and then in the 1985 film
version starring Dustin Hoffman in the title role. David Mamet's
Glengary Glen Ross is another example, the story of a group of
salesmen desperate to meet company quotas and save their jobs.
Mamet's play found life as a cinematic release starring Jack
Lemmon, Alec Baldwin, and Kevin Spacey. Kevin Spacey also stars
in The Big Kahuna, the next of these plays-become-movies about
salesmen to hit the big screen.
The Big Kahuna began life initially as a play entitled
Hospitality Suite, written by Roger Rueff (who also wrote the
screenplay). With his latest entry into this burgeoning and very
specific genre, Rueff finds himself at risk of revisiting the
thematic territory covered so ably by his predecessors Miller and
Mamet. While the film generally avoids merely repeating these
previous films, it cannot completely steer clear of rehashing
many of the same ideas found in Death of a Salesman and
Glengary Glen Ross.
The film focuses on three industrial lubricant salesmen as they
try to land a lucrative account at a weekend convention in
Wichita, Kansas. Larry (played by Kevin Spacey) and Phil (Danny
DeVito) are old pros, and have worked as a team for over twelve
years. Accompanying them is Bob (Peter Facinelli), the young,
naive, and eager initiate who looks to learn the ropes from the
old masters. What he gets is an eye-opening introduction into
the cutthroat world of sales, a world that at once exhilarates
and frustrates, that offers both the great monetary rewards of
omission and the crushing disillusionment of losing a sale.
That these characters sell industrial lubricant is fitting. In
many ways, The Big Kahuna celebrates the slick style of the
salesman, a figure who relies on verbal dexterity to achieve his
ultimate goal, the sale. As Larry, Kevin Spacey is the
beneficiary of many of the most memorable lines in the film,
speaking with the well-oiled tongue of a man who makes his living
by wielding words like weapons. When Bob asks Larry how long he's
been partnered with Phil, Larry immediately breaks into a
rambling discussion of dog years, human years, and geologic time.
Larry's verbal mastery is at once impressive and relentless, as
he unleashes speech after speech throughout the film. His
incessant verbalizing, though, is fundamental to his job and, not
incidentally, his self-image. No one is really interested in
buying industrial lubricant. Larry, like all salesmen, must sell
himself to be successful.
While Spacey's enthusiastic performance as this oral acrobats
noteworthy in The Big Kahuna, it cannot completely rescue the
film's plodding pace. As with many plays translated to film, the
lack of physical movement and the abundance of dialogue make for
a decidedly slow-moving work that must struggle to keep the
audience's interest. Danny DeVito's Phil certainly doesn't help
matters. In contrast to the hyperactive Larry, Phil is numb and
apathetic as a result of his long tenure as a salesman and his
pending divorce. His suicidal fantasies and morose mumblings are
highly Lomanian in content. Haunted by his past failures and
burdened by regret, Phil is given to wistfully philosophical
ramblings on love, God, and death. These moments are the most
regrettable of the film, as Phil is transformed into the
stereotypical Disillusioned Salesman. At the film's conclusion,
however, he does manage to teach a very valuable (if unoriginal)
lesson to the neophyte Bob.
Bob functions mainly as an excuse for Phil and Larry to express
their sundry ideas about life and salesmanship. At the film's
climax, Bob gets his chance to hawk the company product to Mr.
Fuller, the title's referent (the "Big Kahuna") and president of
the company whose account the three are courting. Instead,
however, Bob chooses to discuss Christianity with the potential
client and later defends his decision to Larry and Phil as more
important than selling lubricant. After fending off the
apoplectic Larry, Bob must face Phil, who makes the point that
discussing Christianity and discussing lubricant is essentially
the same activity: they're both about selling.
This significance of this revelation saves the film from its more
melancholy meandering and explains why the figure of the salesman
continues to operate as a focus of both film and theater. The Big Kahuna's most valuable lesson is that everyone, in some way,
is a salesman. Every day, with stories, arguments, actions and
discussions, we're all selling something. Whether it's a
political opinion, a religious belief, or simply one's image,
everyone has something to sell. Human beings interact with one
another in a vast market of exchange, of pitch and purchase. In
fact, this very review that you're reading now is a pitch, an
expression of an opinion that might, in some fashion, be bought
by the reader or else left on the rack. Though we may have
learned this lesson long ago from Arthur Miller, it bears
repeating. For this repetition, if for nothing else, The Big Kahuna succeeds, describing the world many of us inhabit in a
provocative fashion and inspiring a new appreciation for the
likes of Willy Loman.