There, under the watch of drawling manger Dallas (Matthew
McConaughey), Mike and his co-workers, guys with names like Richie (Joe
Manganiello), Ken (Matt Bomer), Tito (Adam Rodriguez), and Tarzan (Kevin Nash),
perform goofy choreographed routines with silly props. Their performances look
like nothing more than racy dance numbers until they slip off just enough
clothes to scandalize and titillate the screaming audience of sorority girls
and bachelorette parties. For their audience this is not about nudity or
dirtiness so much as it’s about the naughtiness of escaping the norms of
everyday life. Either way, it looks like easy money to Adam who is currently
crashing with his older sister (Cody Horn), and so the movie turns into one of
those melodramas wherein the older veteran, frustrated with his life but making
it look so easy, takes the naive new guy into the fold of a business rife with
temptations. Soderbergh takes it all in with his usual patient, clinically
observant cinematography, which steers the film away from easy predictability.
Like Soderbergh’s 2009 film The Girlfriend Experience, this is a film about people living under
a cloud of economic uncertainty, trying to get by with the money they can get selling
themselves. It’s essentially an R-rated backstage drama that starts as goofy
fun of a sort and then grows progressively darker as the full implications of
the business sets in. It doesn’t go exactly where you’d expect, tracking not
simply the younger man’s descent from naivety into jadedness, but the veteran’s
growing disillusionment as well. Here’s a guy who feels like he’s been doing
everything right, getting a job or three, working hard, saving up, and still he
can’t get ahead, can’t find a good foothold. There’s talk of moving the club to
Miami, where, we’re told, the real money is. But would that really change the
situations of these men in a significant way? More money for the same objectification
may not be the healthiest thing, especially as several are already suffering
from mostly well-hidden substance abuse issues. The first performance of the
movie, one dancer ends up passed out backstage. Later, a groupie with a pet pig
is eager to pass out ecstasy. “I’m not my lifestyle,” Mike protests to Adam’s sister,
who is both charmed and repulsed by his flirtatiousness.
What’s best about Magic
Mike is the generous way Soderbergh has of drawing terrific performances
from the entirety of an ensemble. He finds exactly the right ways to use his
performers to best accentuate their skills, to draw out aspects of their
personas in interesting ways. The tension between Tatum’s charm and blockheaded
athleticism is used to flesh out a portrait of a man who allows himself to be
objectified despite larger goals, much like his own early film roles hid his
deeper talent. McConaughey’s near self-parody “alright, alright, alright”
becomes a sort of incantation of sleaze, his mostly shirtless wardrobe a form
of wiry narcissism. The other actors, convincing all, even stand-up comedian
Gabriel Iglesias as the club’s DJ, float in and out of the story, creating a
vivid portrait of this world filled with details both funny (one dancer throws
out his back and shuffles off the stage after a heavyset woman leaps onto the
stage and into his arms) and sad (another dancer brings his wife to a party and
urges the new guy to feel her up).
The film is, in contrast to its high-energy burlesque
on-stage and its funnier moments, so low-key about its off-stage melodrama that
by the end it feels uncommitted and, when the film ends with its thematic cards
still up in the air, the lack of resolution is at once bracing and frustrating.
Still, the film is so well acted and crisply directed that the characters’
(and, by extension, the film’s) uncomfortable tension between enjoyment and
depression becomes notable. As the credits roll, some characters have made
tentative steps towards self-improvement. Others are left, maybe to thrive, perhaps to wallow, in their disreputable
career choices. Why shouldn’t the end be so unresolved? It fits right in with
the sense of economic despair that hovers around in this story of easy money
and uneasy decisions.
No comments:
Post a Comment