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Core
Issues
I Heart Huckabees
Dir. David O. Russell, U.S., Fox Searchlight
Before seeing I Heart Huckabees, I was getting ready
to group David O. Russell together with Wes Anderson,
P.T. Anderson, and Alexander Payne as part of a modern
cadre of filmmakers with similar sensibilities and an
innate knowledge of how to meld organic comic moments
with an embracing humanism. But in contrast to the Andersons,
he doesn’t wear his compassion on his sleeve, and unlike
Payne, who mutated the scathing satire of Citizen
Ruth and Election into the pathetically funny
empathy of About Schmidt, Russell doesn’t allow for
enough emotional extrapolation in I Heart Huckabees
to quite warrant admission into their upper echelons.
In his previous films—Spanking the Monkey, Flirting
with Disaster, and Three Kings —he has proven
an adeptness with an acerbic brand of humor which often
provokes enlightenment, but this time out, in a movie
which plays with blatant philosophical musings, the
lack of further expansion into more sincere realms of
feeling leaves one with a sense of floundering and nowhere
to go.
The tone is set by the opening-credits images of Albert
Markovski, played by Jason Schwartzman—who looks and
sounds strikingly like the Tom Cruise of an inverted
geek world—cursing in his head prior to dedicating a
poem to the rock he has saved from a marsh, setting
off for a nondescript office building, circling its
sterile hallways as he tries to find his way to an appointment.
The glaring off-white of the surroundings are emblematic
of the pointedly generic urban spaces the characters
inhabit throughout the movie, with people and paintings
providing the only spots of color against the blankness.
It’s a promising start and, at first, I was laughing
almost ahead of the jokes, so hotly was I anticipating
them from the trailer, designed as it was with curiosity-piquing
anarchy. It’s certainly amusing for a while to watch
existential detectives Vivian and Bernard Jaffe (Lily
Tomlin and Dustin Hoffman) lurk around, conspicuously
covert as they spy on Albert’s daily routines, having
been hired by him to illuminate the significance of
a series of coincidences. Ignoring protestations that
he wants to isolate the depth of their investigation
to contain only the three instances of running into
the “African man” he describes, they branch out into
a canvassing of his day-to-day reality in order to uncover
his most intensely-felt philosophical issues. This includes
surveying, much to his chagrin, his routines of self-righteous
indignation tied to meetings with Huckabees (a K-/Wal-/Tar-Mart
concoction) as the corporation attempts to co-opt the
Open Spaces Coalition to Stop Suburban Sprawl that Albert
has chartered. Soon disenchanted with the odd couple,
who endlessly expound on the interconnections of everything,
Albert is lead astray by the competing teachings of
nihilistic French author Caterine Vauban, embodied by
Isabelle Huppert (her presence animating the awkwardness
of some of the film’s stabs at absurdism, as she seems
completely incongruous, and not intentionally), who
lends her status as detached, intellectual/sexual cinematic
icon to the project. Her business card aptly reads:
“Cruelty, manipulation, meaninglessness.”
Taking a page from the detectives’ client roster to
help him wade through the existential muck, Albert meets
his designated “other,” Tommy Corn (Mark Wahlberg),
a support-group partner who helps him deal with the
new emotions surfacing as a result of the “dismantling”
process he’s undergoing. While Mark Wahlberg always
has struck me a normal guy well-cast as such rather
than as an actor, in his role here as a firefighter
traumatized by the “September thing,” he fills his unstrung
kook’s rantings with an energetic grace. Tommy’s acute
fixation on the overzealous consumption of petroleum
in America, his conscientious bicycling and aggressive
accusations at virtually everyone who crosses his path,
give birth to some of the film’s most hilarious sequences.
The only problem with this is that his character rarely
becomes more than a jokey mouthpiece; you aspire for
him to be more sympathetically drawn.
Similarly, Dawn (thanks largely to the reliably sublime
Naomi Watts) morphs from Huckabees sweetHeart spokesmodel
into bonnet-wearing, makeup-free waif. She desires to
live more authentically and without all the pretty-girl
accoutrements, and as she progresses in this vein, we
catch flickerings of the deeper feelings beneath the
film’s slick surface. There is something captivating
about the inability of these characters, divorced from
their former insulation, to readjust to the chatter
of normalcy after their awakening to a larger sense
of the universe. Yet the absence of any real profundity
in I Heart Huckabees, filled as it is with the new-age
vibe of admonishments like “Sadness is what you are,
don’t deny it,” and “Where is your pure being now, Tommy?”
makes it difficult to take these transformations seriously.
Such abstract ruminations spewed forth by the characters
initially trigger instantaneous and mirthful laughter,
but the dialogue soon becomes too one-note in its tongue-in-cheekiness.
In this film about meaning, shrewd nonsensicality devolves
quickly into, well, meaninglessness. Russell’s characters
seem lost within the framework of a script more than
in the baffling patterns of the universe; this time,
his comedy excavates less truth than usual, and there
is a gimmickry, a glibness that never truly revealed
itself in his work until now- this is most apparent
in the digital effects sometimes employed to render
the fragmentation of the characters or Albert’s imaginings,
which seem forced, as if the director feels the need
to burn the extra money a star cast entails.
Ultimately, and ironically, what’s missing in I Heart
Huckabees is love. Russell, much as you sense he
wants to, doesn’t demonstrate enough warmth towards
his madcap creatures, and so, rather than blooming into
humans, they remain caricatures. Their constant self-aware
winking ensures that, rather than being lured inwards
and closer to them, we remain at a distance. Their personal
failings and tragedies aren’t treated with the proper
gravity, and so a disconnect arises from the fact that
we want to care about these people, but can’t—we haven’t
been given enough to go on. In a work with a literal
Heart in its title, you would suspect honest sentiment
would be in greater evidence, until you realize that
the Heart is meant sarcastically, commenting upon that
symbol’s newly re-energized commodification and heavy
utilization following the popularity of I Heart NY memorabilia
after 9/11.
The only genuine moment in the movie transpires when
the immaculately beautiful Brad Stand (Jude Law, who
once again finds himself the articulation of perfection,
and, in his incarnation as charming, good-looking, BMW
SUV-driving, big shot Huckabees executive, comes to
stand in for everything Albert despises) crumples in
humiliated tears, and is captured on polaroid by Caterine.
For the first time, as he bears witness to his arch-enemy’s
lowest moment, Albert feels connected to Brad in his
pained humanity. It’s a small taste of what’s missing.
In the end, rather than multiplying outwards, Russell’s
ideas find themselves compressed into the simplistic
somethingness/nothingness dichotomy which constantly
crops up, intoned over parts of the soundtrack, leaving
me to question I Heart Huckabees on the same grounds.
Indicative of somethingness? Of nothingness? Is it possible
the movie set out to evoke a cinematic response in the
spectator to mimic the characters’ internal quandaries?
Much as I hate to say it, leaving the theater, I was
left more with a sense of emptiness.
—KRISTI MITSUDA
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