There’s a zen saying that suggests, “The most
dangerous thing in the world is to think you understand something.” This could
be a good description for the outlook of any Coen brothers’ film, works invested
in ambiguities and absurdities of human lives as reflected in the worldviews
and systems that control them. One man’s belief is another man’s mystery, and
Joel and Ethan Coen have made a career out of stories of existential crises
told through oddball humor and offbeat suspense. Their latest is Hail, Caesar!, a film full of people who
think they understand, having figured out deep reverence for some larger
ideological force or another: the Bible, Das
Kapital, Hollywood’s studio system. But where does that certainty get them?
It’s the early 1950s, and a studio fixer (Josh Brolin) is heading into a day
that’ll be full of complications to test many a person’s certainties, a
straight-faced screwball panic, or maybe philosophical wrestling on laughing
gas. Either way it’s a pip, but with typical Coen precision and deliberateness.
Sustained goofing on classic Hollywood, a
day-in-the-life on the backlot not too far removed from Don Lockwood and Lina
Lamont’s, the Coens follow Brolin’s studio suit from set to set wrangling
stars, quelling complaints, and staving off controversy. The fictional Capitol
Pictures is hard at work on several movies: a bathing beauty musical, a wordy
melodrama, a dancing sailors movie, a singing cowboy picture, and a Biblical
epic. Bopping between the films in progress we’re presented with a great imitation
of Hollywood iconography: a little Robert Taylor here, some Esther Williams
there, with Gene Kelly, Roy Rodgers, and others thrown in for good measure.
It’s like a bleary Turner Classic Movies binge if you kept passing out and
dreaming ridiculous connective behind-the-scenes tissue between disparate films.
The Coens have fun conjuring up winking nods to historical references points,
and mimicking the style of 50’s filmmaking. (Lap dissolves, rear projection, matte
paintings and more show up.) It’s in love with its pastiche, but has enough
distance to maintain an aloof absurdism.
Between fun sketches of films within the film
we’re treated to a stew of behind-the-scenes silliness, wacky shenanigans that
find increasingly offbeat expression on their way to some head-scratching
conclusions. (“Accept the mystery,” as a character from the Coen’s great, maybe
greatest, work A Serious Man might
say.) Hail, Caesar! is set in motion
when work on said Biblical epic is thrown into jeopardy when its star (played
with daffy blockheaded charm by George Clooney) is kidnapped by two devious
extras intent on delivering him to a clandestine meeting of Hollywood
subversives in Malibu. This is, of course, the day’s biggest problem for
Brolin’s harried studio middleman, who’s fielding a job offer from an aircraft
manufacture, but can’t quite shake the fun of all this show business. He tries
to keep the story quiet, even as ransom notes show up and there’s a dozen other
problems needing his attention. Who ever said his job was easy?
This is the Coen’s fizziest
man-on-the-verge-of-a-nervous-breakdown story, like the better, more downbeat,
though still plenty funny, Barton Fink
or Serious Man or Inside Llewyn Davis played in a major
key. Brolin scurries around dealing with an unmarried ingénue (Scarlett
Johansson) whose pregnancy is a problem for her innocent image, a Western star (Alden
Ehrenreich) who is an awkward fit for a drawing room drama by a fancy director
(Ralph Fiennes), and competitive twin gossip columnists (Tilda Swinton)
sniffing around the smell of scandal. A host of studio employees (played by the
likes of Channing Tatum, Clancy Brown, Wayne Knight, and Frances McDormand, to
name a few) scramble through the story, most getting a few amusing moments
bouncing off Brolin’s clench-jawed determination. He’s grinding through the
day, keeping total calamity at bay. Sure, a job overseeing airplane factories
would be easier, but wouldn’t he miss the fun of racing around Los Angeles,
dealing with all the kooks and their crisises?
In its meandering way, Hail, Caesar! takes the usual Coen delight in dialogue, peculiar
turns of phrase, droll patter, looping repetition, dry sarcasm, airy
eccentricities, and narrative dead-ends and cul-de-sacs. And all this, of
course, serves only to reveal characters dancing over the deep abyss of
uncertainty. Like a softer version of what their sharply cynical Burn After Reading did to the espionage
game – turning paranoid thriller mechanics on their ear to amplify the
absurdity and the impossibility of “making sense” – this film asks if cinema –
with all its egos, pretentions, and petty gossip – is serious business. The
answer is: not really. Show business is cut from some deeply silly cloth. But
it’s no better than anyone else who claims to be doing important work – a
priest, a rabbi, a pawn of the military-industrial complex, a studio stooge, a
Communist. That round-up sounds like a cast list for a great joke, and that’s
what the Coens try for here, staging scenes in which all the above, and more
too, make themselves out to be figures of fun when they take themselves too
seriously.
The film often feels slight, busy goofing
around, doodling with silly details and funny performances, Roger Deakins’ brightly
lit, primary color-popping cinematography letting wacky backstage antics and a
variety of movie genres bleed off the backlot and into conversation with one
another. But it picks up weight as it punctures windbags’ hot air and scoffs at
those who are too sure they have the perfect understanding of anything –
history, economics, politics, morality, you name it. Everyone’s spinning their own
stories about how the world works, but their boats are easily rocked. Shouldn’t
there always be room for doubt, like an actor delivering a passionate speech, but
forgetting his closing line? The movies, this film seems to say, may be
frivolous gossamer illusions, but isn’t anything we cling to in order to make
sense of our lives? If we’re going to lose ourselves in soothing fictions, it
may as well come from dazzling Technicolor fantasies lighting up the silver
screen.
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