Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story

:

Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
80
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
'Tristram Shandy' Is Orchestrated Chaos
By David Germain, Associated Press

Of course, if anyone were cocky and bullheaded enough to film Laurence Sterne's supposedly unfilmable literary romp "Tristram Shandy," it would have to be Michael Winterbottom.

Then again, the filmmaker behind such gems as "24 Hour Party People," a portrait of Britain's 1980s music scene, and "In This World," a docudrama about Afghans seeking refuge in London, hasn't really filmed "Tristram Shandy."

Winterbottom's "Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story" cleverly places the 18th century tale in a contemporary framework as a movie crew sets out to shoot an adaptation of Sterne's rollicking, unconventional novel "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman."

The approach allows Winterbottom and screenwriter Martin Hardy to capture the playful spirit of Sterne's novel, which is rife with unusual structural devices, including stories within stories, typographical whimsies such as blacked-out pages and twists of narration as main character Tristram comments omnisciently about events that happened before he was born.

The film's format also lends itself to a lot of self-indulgence by Winterbottom and friends, much of it amusing or at least interesting, much of it not so engaging and a bit of it downright annoying.

Anticipating the free-form construction of James Joyce's "Ulysses" and "Finnegan's Wake" nearly two centuries later, Sterne's "Tristram Shandy" presents a rambling narrative packed with asides from his rascally, not thoroughly credible title character.

Sterne's novel packs plenty of verbiage but comparatively little plot as narrator Tristram prattles on about his relations and the circle of people living around his family's ancestral home in Yorkshire.

The movie follows that pattern, casting Steve Coogan, star of "24 Hour Party People," as Tristram, Tristram's father and as a fictionalized version of Steve Coogan, the actor starring in a costume-pageant film version of "Tristram Shandy."

The film toys with the petulant persona Coogan has copped in previous gigs, including a segment of Jim Jarmusch's "Coffee and Cigarettes." As the prima donna actor playing Tristram, Coogan frets that the shoes of fellow performer Rob Brydon, playing Tristram's lovable uncle, might elevate his co-star to an inappropriate stature.

Coogan later feels his star status diminishing as the filmmakers make a last-minute decision to restore a love story involving Brydon's character to the script, enlisting Gillian Anderson of "The X-Files" to play Brydon's lady love.

Along with Coogan, Brydon and Anderson, the cast includes Naomie Harris as a production runner who catches Coogan's eye, Kelly Macdonald as Coogan's girlfriend, Jeremy Northam as the film's director and Winterbottom regular Shirley Henderson.

To call the film a mess is a compliment, its carefully orchestrated chaos a fitting reflection of Sterne's prose. Winterbottom crafts wry observations on the nature and value of storytelling, and many of the exchanges — particularly sequences between Coogan and Brydon — are hilarious.

But the film often falters in nudge-nudge, wink-wink humor about celebrity and the process of filmmaking. Some of the gags connect, but the film sometimes leaves the impression that Winterbottom's cock-and-bull story is just that, little more than an elaborate inside joke by a filmmaker out to amuse mainly himself.

Of course, if anyone were cocky and bullheaded enough to film Laurence Sterne's supposedly unfilmable literary romp "Tristram Shandy," it would have to be Michael Winterbottom.

Then again, the filmmaker behind such gems as "24 Hour Party People," a portrait of Britain's 1980s music scene, and "In This World," a docudrama about Afghans seeking refuge in London, hasn't really filmed "Tristram Shandy."

Winterbottom's "Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story" cleverly places the 18th century tale in a contemporary framework as a movie crew sets out to shoot an adaptation of Sterne's rollicking, unconventional novel "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman."

The approach allows Winterbottom and screenwriter Martin Hardy to capture the playful spirit of Sterne's novel, which is rife with unusual structural devices, including stories within stories, typographical whimsies such as blacked-out pages and twists of narration as main character Tristram comments omnisciently about events that happened before he was born.

The film's format also lends itself to a lot of self-indulgence by Winterbottom and friends, much of it amusing or at least interesting, much of it not so engaging and a bit of it downright annoying.

Anticipating the free-form construction of James Joyce's "Ulysses" and "Finnegan's Wake" nearly two centuries later, Sterne's "Tristram Shandy" presents a rambling narrative packed with asides from his rascally, not thoroughly credible title character.

Sterne's novel packs plenty of verbiage but comparatively little plot as narrator Tristram prattles on about his relations and the circle of people living around his family's ancestral home in Yorkshire.

The movie follows that pattern, casting Steve Coogan, star of "24 Hour Party People," as Tristram, Tristram's father and as a fictionalized version of Steve Coogan, the actor starring in a costume-pageant film version of "Tristram Shandy."

The film toys with the petulant persona Coogan has copped in previous gigs, including a segment of Jim Jarmusch's "Coffee and Cigarettes." As the prima donna actor playing Tristram, Coogan frets that the shoes of fellow performer Rob Brydon, playing Tristram's lovable uncle, might elevate his co-star to an inappropriate stature.

Coogan later feels his star status diminishing as the filmmakers make a last-minute decision to restore a love story involving Brydon's character to the script, enlisting Gillian Anderson of "The X-Files" to play Brydon's lady love.

Along with Coogan, Brydon and Anderson, the cast includes Naomie Harris as a production runner who catches Coogan's eye, Kelly Macdonald as Coogan's girlfriend, Jeremy Northam as the film's director and Winterbottom regular Shirley Henderson.

To call the film a mess is a compliment, its carefully orchestrated chaos a fitting reflection of Sterne's prose. Winterbottom crafts wry observations on the nature and value of storytelling, and many of the exchanges — particularly sequences between Coogan and Brydon — are hilarious.

But the film often falters in nudge-nudge, wink-wink humor about celebrity and the process of filmmaking. Some of the gags connect, but the film sometimes leaves the impression that Winterbottom's cock-and-bull story is just that, little more than an elaborate inside joke by a filmmaker out to amuse mainly himself.

100
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
Because their work is so varied, the director Winterbottom and Boyce, his frequent writer, are only now coming into focus as perhaps the most creative team in British film.Read Full Review »
100
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
If that sounds highbrow and pretentious, it's not. The neat trick of Tristram Shandy is that the whole thing comes off as a lark.Read Full Review »
100
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
The first great, mind-tickling treat of the new movie year.Read Full Review »
90
The New York Times: Dana Stevens
This is not just a movie-within-a-movie, but a movie-within-a-movie-within-a-movie, something that sounds unbearably arch but that is swift, funny and surprisingly unpretentious.Read Full Review »
88
Boston Globe: Ty Burr
The movie's still a wickedly droll put-on. Better yet, beneath the fun lurks a dry and weary sigh at life's refusal to match the tidiness of art.Read Full Review »
80
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter
It's pretty funny. You don't actually watch it so much as indulge it and admire its cleverness.Read Full Review »
80
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Carina Chocano
The trouble with describing a story this complex and digressive is that it's hard to keep it from sounding complicated and hard-to-follow. But for a movie about movies, it's surprisingly humanistic, cheerful and true to life.Read Full Review »
80
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
A comedy embedded with secret tips for better, more enjoyable living.Read Full Review »
80
Time: Richard Corliss
This may seem too inside-cricket for a U.S. audience. And it's true that Cock and Bull is so postpostmodern, it's very nearly postmovie. But it's no less diverting for all that. It would be a shame if the great novel no one has read becomes the terrific film nobody bothers to see.Read Full Review »
80
Slate: Dana Stevens
Never loses sight of its mission to be as silly, bawdy, and entertaining as possible.Read Full Review »
See all Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story reviews at metacritic.com »