|
Confessions Of A
Dangerous Mind
Reviewed by Rich Drees

It’s a running joke among some
film fans that James Bond is the worst secret agent ever. Everywhere he goes
he just announces himself with his real name. Not very inconspicuous. But
now the movies have presented us with a real life secret agent who was known
to millions of television viewers in the `70s. That is, if we believe his
story.
Based on his “Unauthorized
Autobiography” Confessions of a Dangerous Mind takes audiences
through the purported double life of game show impresario Chuck Barris. On
one hand there’s the public Barris, creator of such shows as The Newlywed
Game and The Gong Show. On the other hand, there’s the Chuck
Barris who used his job as a game show producer as a cover for being a CIA
assassin.
When the book was first
published in 1984, critics were unimpressed with the tome and dismissed
Barris’ claims out of hand. But whether his claims of being a contract
killer for the CIA are true or is just a metaphor for his own problems with
frustration at the direction his life was going in doesn’t matter and the
movie doesn’t try to make a judgment one way or the other either. There are
clues that point both ways. The film is a character study of a man educated
enough to be able to quote writers like Carlisle and Nabakov, but frustrated
that he doesn’t find the actualization of his own ideas to have the same
impact as the writers he admired.
For a first time effort,
George Clooney has directed a film that is more visually engaging then some
turned out by more experienced helmers. The film’s story span the 1950s
through the early `80s and he and cinematographer Newton Thomas Sigel have
designed a specific look for each decade from the faded look of the `50s
through the monochromatic look of Barris’ CIA training to the handheld
camera work of the 1970s. Clooney has an interesting eye for designing
shots, sometimes moving the action into the background while something as
mundane as a doorknob fills the foreground. Other shots, like Barris’ call
to an ABC executive about The Dating Game or the transition between
his memory of his parent’s cold marriage to The Newlywed Game set
have a stage-like feel that recalls some of the tricks Orson Welles used in
Citizen Kane.
Fans of The
Gong Show and other of Barris’ productions may be a little disappointed
as not much screen time is devoted to them. But these fleeting moments do
deliver some great gems- Brad Pitt and Matt Damon as bachelors loosing out
to a schlub on The Dating Game, the actual video tape footage of one of
The Newlywed Game most notorious answers. Rockwell’s absolute perfect
capture of Barris’ on-air Gong Show persona merely enforces the rest
of his performance in the viewers minds. |