Hollywoodland

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Critics' Reviews

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Avg. Score
1.
Blind Side, The
2.
Twilight Saga: New Moon, The
6.
49
Metascore
®
62
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
'Hollywoodland' Is Affleck's Best
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

"It should have been enough."

So claims a friend of George Reeves in the superbly acted, compellingly melancholy new Hollywood biography, "Hollywoodland." Reeves appeared in two of the most popular movies ever made ("Gone With the Wind," "From Here to Eternity") and achieved still greater fame in the 1950s as television's "Superman." Yet he apparently shot himself in 1959.

The movie presents him as hopelessly typecast, out of work and facing a career as a wrestler; he evidently did not think his achievements were "enough." He was 45 when he died, and he didn't really die alone.

As the film demonstrates, this was a tragedy shared by a nation of kids who knew little about suicide. They had a tough time linking their truth-seeking all-American hero with self-destruction, yet the link was as inescapable as a Page One headline. If you were the right age, Reeves' seemingly inexplicable death marked a true loss of innocence.

"Hollywoodland," directed by Allen Coulter ("The Sopranos") and written by Paul Bernbaum (another television veteran), is built around the possibility that Reeves didn't kill himself. It's designed as a detective story in which a mercenary investigator, Louis Simo (Adrien Brody), takes money from Reeves' mother (Lois Smith) and tries to make the case that Reeves was murdered.

Coulter and Bernbaum even dramatize alternate versions of how he was killed. In one version, Reeves' girlfriend, Lenore Lemmon (Robin Tunney), is responsible. Another version suggests the involvement of an MGM studio boss, Eddie Mannix (Bob Hoskins), whose wayward wife, Toni (Diane Lane), had just been jilted by Reeves. The evidence suggests that the case was closed before several essential questions could be answered.

In the movie, however, it's Reeves' depressed nature that rings true. He's had it all, his future looks unpromising, and his fame is tied entirely to a kiddie-show character he detests. He signed on to the show because he needed a paycheck, he assumed few would watch it, and it ended up running his life.

Ben Affleck (never better) brings a surprising generosity to the role of George Reeves, hinting at the man's personal charm, recreating the ironic humor he brought to Superman, and embracing the middle-aged, slightly paunchy superhero who would eventually be replaced by Christopher Reeve and Brandon Routh. Largely through Affleck's performance, Coulter generates a genuine affection for the character as well as 1940s/1950s Hollywood.

Bernbaum's script sometimes accepts the myth rather than the man. Reeves's scenes were not trimmed from "From Here to Eternity," as the film suggests; his role was never a big one. When he died, Reeves was not really the midlife failure the film presents. He was engaged to marry Lemmon and he was about to recreate his most famous role in a CBS revival of "The Adventures of Superman."

Truth or legend, the movie eventually shifts its focus from Reeves to Simo, whose problems with his wife (Molly Parker) and son, Evan (played by Charlie Lea and later by Zach Mills), begin to connect with his investigation. The most moving scenes belong not to a deceased celebrity but to these seemingly peripheral characters.

More movies on MSNBC 

"It should have been enough."

So claims a friend of George Reeves in the superbly acted, compellingly melancholy new Hollywood biography, "Hollywoodland." Reeves appeared in two of the most popular movies ever made ("Gone With the Wind," "From Here to Eternity") and achieved still greater fame in the 1950s as television's "Superman." Yet he apparently shot himself in 1959.

The movie presents him as hopelessly typecast, out of work and facing a career as a wrestler; he evidently did not think his achievements were "enough." He was 45 when he died, and he didn't really die alone.

As the film demonstrates, this was a tragedy shared by a nation of kids who knew little about suicide. They had a tough time linking their truth-seeking all-American hero with self-destruction, yet the link was as inescapable as a Page One headline. If you were the right age, Reeves' seemingly inexplicable death marked a true loss of innocence.

"Hollywoodland," directed by Allen Coulter ("The Sopranos") and written by Paul Bernbaum (another television veteran), is built around the possibility that Reeves didn't kill himself. It's designed as a detective story in which a mercenary investigator, Louis Simo (Adrien Brody), takes money from Reeves' mother (Lois Smith) and tries to make the case that Reeves was murdered.

Coulter and Bernbaum even dramatize alternate versions of how he was killed. In one version, Reeves' girlfriend, Lenore Lemmon (Robin Tunney), is responsible. Another version suggests the involvement of an MGM studio boss, Eddie Mannix (Bob Hoskins), whose wayward wife, Toni (Diane Lane), had just been jilted by Reeves. The evidence suggests that the case was closed before several essential questions could be answered.

In the movie, however, it's Reeves' depressed nature that rings true. He's had it all, his future looks unpromising, and his fame is tied entirely to a kiddie-show character he detests. He signed on to the show because he needed a paycheck, he assumed few would watch it, and it ended up running his life.

Ben Affleck (never better) brings a surprising generosity to the role of George Reeves, hinting at the man's personal charm, recreating the ironic humor he brought to Superman, and embracing the middle-aged, slightly paunchy superhero who would eventually be replaced by Christopher Reeve and Brandon Routh. Largely through Affleck's performance, Coulter generates a genuine affection for the character as well as 1940s/1950s Hollywood.

Bernbaum's script sometimes accepts the myth rather than the man. Reeves's scenes were not trimmed from "From Here to Eternity," as the film suggests; his role was never a big one. When he died, Reeves was not really the midlife failure the film presents. He was engaged to marry Lemmon and he was about to recreate his most famous role in a CBS revival of "The Adventures of Superman."

Truth or legend, the movie eventually shifts its focus from Reeves to Simo, whose problems with his wife (Molly Parker) and son, Evan (played by Charlie Lea and later by Zach Mills), begin to connect with his investigation. The most moving scenes belong not to a deceased celebrity but to these seemingly peripheral characters.

More movies on MSNBC 

83
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
The chief frustration of this otherwise well-made, well-acted, well-heeled picture -- a movie classy in its artful modesty, with every detail of plot and period furnishings lovingly conceived, every lick of jazz-influenced score true to the times -- is that it is so very self-absorbedly graceful about something so very insular and...unremarkable.Read Full Review »
75
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
Coulter is a TV veteran but a motion picture newcomer. His work here indicates he is someone to watch. The pacing is slow and deliberate, but the story never ceases to intrigue.Read Full Review »
75
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
The irony is that Affleck's battering at the hands of fame has prepped him beautifully to play Reeves.Read Full Review »
70
Village Voice: J. Hoberman
Props then to Affleck. Coulter contrived a neat behavioral trick by inducing his star to play a comparably big-jawed bad actor. Surrounded as he is by canny professionals--Lane, Hoskins, Smith, and Jeffrey DeMunn as an unctuous glad-handing agent--it's an unexpectedly touching performance.Read Full Review »
63
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
A whodunit, a whydunit, and an excuse for Adrien Brody to mug it up like nobody's business.Read Full Review »
63
USA Today: Claudia Puig
Hollywoodland explores an intriguing bit of Hollywood history, and through the strength of its performances keeps us engaged and entertained.Read Full Review »
60
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
Even though Brody works hard -- and he's got those magnificent drooping eyes, which suggest both innocence and a seen-it-all-before weariness -- his scenes don't spark, and the movie drags around them.Read Full Review »
60
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
This overly derivative motion picture thinks it is doing and saying more than it is. Instead, it ends up as little more than a reasonable facsimile of the real thing, despite a subtle and effective performance by Ben Affleck, of all people.Read Full Review »
60
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter
And though brilliantly acted, it's not. For some reason, the director and the writer (Paul Bernbaum) have chosen an exceedingly awkward path into the materials. They break the narrative into two strands and play them off each other in cheap and easy ways for insubstantial effect.Read Full Review »
50
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
Hollywoodland has scraps of old movie glamour. It also has shades of later movies that sullied all that class and refinement with a lurid touch, namely Roman Polanski's "Chinatown." But that's all Hollywoodland is: scraps and shade.Read Full Review »
See all Hollywoodland reviews at metacritic.com »