+ another review by Todd R. Ramlow
Love grows
For all the glee produced by the hair gel joke in
There's Something About Mary, I confess that
sometimes I wish the whole thing never happened. Yes,
it the movie gave Cameron Diaz a chance to show what a
good sport she is, Ben Stiller a chance to get the
girl, and Diaz and Matt Dillon a chance to get to know
each other, even if it didn't last. But still, I
regret the major fallout of the grand success of the
film, which is that Bobby and Peter Farrelly have free
rein to make it again and again and again (and, as we
all know, they were making it before Mary, as
Kingpin and Dumb and Dumber). Now, it's
getting old.
That's not to say that the latest version of that
film, Shallow Hal, has nothing redeeming about
it. Any movie that gives Jack Black more to do than
bounce off the Romantic Lead has something going for
it. This guy is endlessly watchable. Whether he's
blowing shit up for Bruce Willis in The Jackal,
extolling the virtues of some obscure indie band to
Johnny Cusack in High Fidelity, shooting heroin
with Billy Crudup in Jesus' Son, or trundling
through the wintry wilderness in the video for
"Wonderboy," the new single by his two-man band,
Tenacious D, Black is always a pleasure. Irony,
weirdness, perversion -- he has it all. It was only a
matter of time before Hollywood came a-knocking.
It's too bad that Shallow Hal doesn't make full
use of Black's charismatic strangeness. Already it's
being called the Farrellys' most "mainstream" offering
to date, and, as annoying as their previous films have
been, this is not necessarily good news. The brothers'
inclination toward sappiness has, in the past, been
held in check by their affection for gross-out humor.
Shallow Hal is more sentimental and ostensibly
more moralistic, in its purported pro-depth of
feeling, anti-weight discrimination "message," but in
the end, it all seems pretty superficial.
The basic formula is much the same as the Farrellys'
other movies: the hero, strange as he may be, is set
off by much odder and more offensive types. Hal is a
goofy, unself-conscious loser of a party animal who
never notices that the typically beautiful girls he
dates (or tries to date) are idiotic or really mean.
He believes this because, a pre-credits scene informs
us, when he was nine years old, his father offered
these words of wisdom from his deathbed: "Don't be
satisfied with routine poontang." Somehow, this
instruction translates for Hal as: "Be shallow." And
so he is, with gusto: again and again, he pursues the
babe with the skimpiest top and most phenomenal bone
structure (though he admits it would be all right with
him if she was "into culture and shit, too"). The
first time you see adult Hal, he's on the hunt,
gyrating like a wounded animal across the dance floor,
pumping his neck, checking the chicks, uncomprehending
when they dis him outright. And oh yes, his sideburns
are way too long to be cool.
Hal is encouraged in his wolfish antics by his best
friend, Mauricio (KFC pitchman Jason Alexander). Like
most buddies in romantic comedies, even the gross-out
ones, Mauricio is the designated sounding board and
foil. And so he looks much worse than Hal,
supplementing his terrible toupee with spray-on
hair-in-a-can, and nurturing a George-Costanza-like
obsession with his current girlfriend's second toe:
it's longer than the big toe, and so, he resolves, he
must break up with her. By comparison, Hal's arrogance
seems less odious: when we meet him, he's the dumpee
rather than the dumper. Still, he's a jerk and must be
de-jerked: according to Peter Farrelly, the movie is
"about a guy who finds his soul and realizes what's
important" (however these events might be related).
This soul-finding process is jumpstarted by none other
than Tony Robbins, playing himself. When the two are
stuck on an elevator together, Hal spews his tale of
unlucky-in-love woe, and Robbins, taking pity on him,
puts the zap on his head, such that, from then on, Hal
will see only people's "inner beauty," not their
external appearances. This presents an interesting
problem, as the film must now show Hal's perspective
while also letting you in on the joke that what he's
seeing is not what everyone else sees.
Typically, the camera first shows Hal's vision, say,
the beautiful girl at the club, and then someone
else's point of view, say, Mauricio looking at the
same spot on the dance floor, now occupied by a girl
with a large nose, bad skin, braces, saggy breasts,
etc., boogying with a very enthusiastic Hal. The joke
is supposedly on Hal, who doesn't see what you or
Mauricio sees, but it's also, no surprise, on the
girl, delirious that she has finally met someone, even
someone as crass and hokey as Hal, who sees her and
likes her fine the way she is. According to the film's
rudimentary -- not to say shallow -- logic, the
outwardly "ugly" person always possesses "inner
beauty." Otherwise, the joke doesn't work.
Enter Rosemary (Gwyneth Paltrow, sometimes in a fat
suit, sometimes substituted by another actor, shot
from behind), with whom he falls promptly in love
because, to him, she looks like Gwyneth Paltrow.
Though Mauricio almost chokes on his hotdog when he
sees her and proceeds to call her names ("rhino,"
"cow," etc.), Hal stubbornly believes his own eyes. He
sees only Rosie's goodness (which equates to
thinness): she's smart, funny, and quick, a Peace
Corps worker and a volunteer at the local hospital's
pediatrics ward. It's not until Hal has the zap lifted
that he learns his lesson, by realizing that he really
is in love with her "inner beauty" even if she does
weigh 300 pounds on the outside. Until then, he can
only wonder why others (including Rosie's own father,
who happens to be Hal's employer) make rude remarks
about her appearance and chairs collapse beneath her.
Such comic hijinks make Hal look goofily gallant and
Rosie mostly pitiable. It seems that the film's
"message" is that it's easy to fall in love someone
who looks like Gwyneth Paltrow, and harder with
someone who weighs 300 pounds or has warts on her
nose. And this is the case even if you look like Jack
Black, because most men, for all the image anxieties
and affection for liposuction that they've been
developing in recent years, still don't have quite the
same investment in their appearances as most women. At
some level, the film works overtime to indict
conventional beauty standards and masculine privilege
and unself-consciousness. This is surely a simple
idea, though perhaps it's a step forward (or in some
direction) for the Farrellys: this time out, no
chickens up anyone's derriere, no Frisbees to the
head, not even a fart joke.
Still, the targets are easy to spot, including
Mauricio (who never changes appearance for Hal, even
when Hal has the zap). Mauricio is really the shorter,
rounder version of Hank in Me, Myself & Irene:
he says the mean things that make you laugh and also
make you wonder why you're laughing, and then he gets
his own comeuppance at film's end. And so, while the
film makes an obvious moral point, it also lets you
off the hook, because you know that Mauricio is not
really your point of identification, and Hal is
really in love with Gwyneth Paltrow, whose fat
suit (not revealed in full until film's end) is
unconvincing. That is, the usual beauty standards
remain in place.
This is the rub, really, in the film's manifestly good
intentions. Like Julia Roberts before her (who wore a
fat suit for America's Sweethearts), Paltrow
has been hawking the film on talk shows, discussing
the stretch that she wanted to make with the comedic
role, as well as her adventures in the fat suit. When
she had it on, people wouldn't look at her on the
street or the hotel bar, she says: "No one wanted to
connect with me. It was a profound, very sad and
startling experience." And so, she's been ending her
interviews -- on Today or Good Morning
America or wherever -- with a declaration that "we
need to fight weight discrimination." It's good to
have your consciousness raised.