+ another review of The Mexican by Todd R. Ramlow
Hard Places
Everyone knows that Brad Pitt is prodigiously
appealing. But even though he's always on the cover
of People magazine, he's not really a conventional
movie star. While he's certainly popular, as well as
talented and very pretty (beautiful, really), Pitt
actively resists the onus of being a star. While more
regular celebrities, like Leo DiCaprio and Tom Hanks,
are paid a lot of money because they can "open" films
just by being in them, Pitt has adopted an alternate
route. He opens movies, but he acts as if he'd rather
not. Aside from a few high profile bungles (Legends
of the Fall and Meet Joe Black leap to mind), Pitt
has been fairly assiduous about choosing films that
demonstrate that his pretty presence can be -- even
should be -- overwhelmed by various elements, for
instance, grisly dead bodies (Seven), CGI elephants
and Bruce Willis (12 Monkeys), Mulder pretending to
be a photographer (Kalifornia), many many mountain
vistas (Seven Years in Tibet), verbal incoherence
(Snatch), or commercially successful anti-commercial
message-making (Fight Club -- although, honestly, in
this case, Pitt's frequent bare-chestedness tends to
reinforce his bodily glory, despite and because of all
the black eyes and bruises).
In The Mexican, Gore Verbinski's slow-moving,
border-crossing road picture, Brad Pitt is at it
again. Cast in something approximating a romantic
comedy (though it's not nearly so zany and cute and
comical as the trailers might lead you to believe),
opposite Hollywood's very brightest and best-marketed
superstar, Julia Roberts, he's also trying (sort of,
maybe) to stick to his anti-movie-star guns. And so he
looks caught between a rock and a hard place. Poor
guy. As much effort as he puts into not being Brad
Pitt, there he always is -- Brad Pitt.
On its good-looking surface (being well-composed and
carefully lit), The Mexican is a love story. More
precisely, Jerry (Pitt) and Samantha (Roberts) are in
love but drive each other crazy. They actually aren't
together for most of the film (which is a good thing,
because when these characters are together, they're
monotonous and sometimes unbearable, her especially --
loud and whiny), but the plot nominally concerns the
efforts of these sparring, sparkless partners to "get
it together" and love each other unconditionally. Even
though this happy ending does not actually occur on
screen, the film hints heavily that it might, sometime
later, after the final credits are over. Here's a
clever bit (not): the movie actually begins with the
couple's break-up, and then spends the rest of its
time getting them back together. Jerry is a hapless
peon in a standard-issue plot, where a couple of
ruthless gangsters, Nayman (Bob Balaban) and Margolese
(Gene Hackman) are both wanting desperately to get
their hands on a fabulous, antique, hand-crafted
pistol called "The Mexican." Nayman dispatches Jerry
to Mexico to get said pistol, without telling him
details -- namely, the thing is priceless and it is
cursed.
The curse stems from the gun's mythically weighted
history, along the lines of the Maltese Falcon. You're
subjected to three long-winded versions of the legend
attached to this gun, each in tinted, old-style movie
footage, so that the story looks special and corny at
the same time, you know, like the filmmakers are aware
that the device is cliched but are using it anyway.
Briefly, it was made by a Mexican gunsmith long ago,
as a present to a nobleman who was to marry the
gunsmith's daughter; but she's in love with the
gunsmith's assistant, and in each of the different
versions, she or the assistant or someone pay dearly
for wanting what he or she can't have. And so, this
gun is supposed to be all about love rather than
violence, but it ends up inflicting awful violence
anyway, as guns tend to do. The awfulness is mitigated
by the framing of the story -- apparently it's funny
to watch to the quaint Mexican villagers shoot each
other unintentionally or deliberately, again and
again.
I say this understanding that it's also apparently
funny to watch the present day characters shooting
each other -- in a foot or a throat on purpose, in a
head by accident -- because that's what they do in
this relentlessly post-tarantino universe. But for all
the shooting and posturing, there's not much action
here, mostly repeated (and I mean, repeated) shots of
cars on lonesome Mexican backroads and traffic lights
swinging in the dusty wind. The pistola that
everyone's so hot to possess is essentially a plot
device that allows the U.S. characters to spend time
in hot desert towns across the border. Like other
recent films set in Mexico (say, Traffic and All the Pretty Horses), this one is enthralled by what it
presents as Mexico's inherent violence, inscrutable
exoticism, and sweaty-faced "banditos," that is, all
that too-familiar iconography that's "other" from the
"American" norm. Such representational jingoism is
surely tired, and has been variously deflated over the
years (John Huston was wrangling with it way back in
1948's Treasure of the Sierra Madre), but this
recent revival is particularly troubling, because
everyone involved should know better by now.
To be fair, The Mexican does spend much of its time
casting aspersions on U.S. tackiness, in the form of
truckstops and Las Vegas hotels. While Jerry is
finding, losing, retrieving, and then re-losing the
gun, Samantha -- they've broken up, remember -- is on
her way to Vegas, where she plans to become a waitress
and then a croupier, because, she says, she has "the
hands for it." En route, she's kidnapped by a hitman
named Leroy (James Gandolfini, as yet another
charming, confused assassin -- will he ever get to
play another part?), who has been hired to put
pressure on Jerry. Leroy first nabs Sam by "saving"
her from another hitman (played by Sherman Augustus
and listed in the credits only as the "Well-Dressed
Black Man" -- let's just say that he's the only
black man in the film, and never appears without his
way-cool shades; i.e., he's as "other" and unknowable
as the scruffy Mexicans are). This initial encounter
sets up Sam and Leroy's relationship for the rest of
the film -- they're less vicious captor and frightened
captee than comrades. It's a little too endearing,
yes. And this endearingness is exacerbated when Leroy
outs himself for Sam; the fact that he's gay
ostensibly makes him sensitive by definition,
especially for a hitman. Sam and Leroy bond over this
little secret (obviously not a good thing to circulate
within the hitman "community"), advising each other on
love, trust, and commitment -- it's Will & Grace on
the road.
Eventually, Jerry and Sam will be reunited, if only
so they can scrap some more, because that is the
point, isn't it? Before this happens, Jerry spends a
few onscreen minutes with his erstwhile partner Ted
(J.K. Simmons, Oz's resident neo-Nazi, here toned
down and wearing a "comb-over" wig and touristy
Bermuda shorts). While searching for the gun and
weathering various abuses by locals, these two rather
inept gangster-wannabes chat about their chosen
profession, their capacities to commit, and their
changing status as white men with guns: in Mexico,
their usual privilege is somewhat diminished. Pitt and
Simmons are very good, and very unflashy, together,
showing subtly how Jerry and Ted must renegotiate who
they think they are in relation to their shifting
contexts. It's a lesson that the rest of The Mexican
might have taken more to heart.