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Singing for their souls
Duets
The world of karaoke must be filled with quirky, offbeat
characters. It must be riddled with people who truly live to don
sequins and suede and stride up on stage to belt out tunes for
fun and prize money. Duets promises to capture these very people
in that very world, to show their hearts and humanity, their
dreams and their drive. Instead it delivers, for the most part,
mundanity and a muddled message about the soulless nature of
American society today. Duets is comprised of three interlocking stories about pairs
of characters brought together by karaoke. It's an often awkward
and overly-loose plait. Occasionally the right notes are hit, but
for the most part it's all just a little off-key. Firstly there's an ageing karaoke hustler Ricky Dean (Huey
Lewis), who is oddly reunited with the daughter he's never met,
Liv (Gwyneth Paltrow), over his ex-lover's casket. He's heading -
as will all the characters - to a karaoke competition in Omaha.
Liv tags along and discovers she's got her father's voice; but
can she win his affection too? Lewis shows that although he can
carry a tune very well, his acting skills are clunky and robotic.
Gwyneth is in gawky mode, all flailing limbs, doe-eyed stares and
hallmark-card sentimentality. Then there's Billy (Scott Speedman), a sweet-natured person
whose girlfriend is sleeping with the guy he owns a cab with, and
karaoke-addict Suzi Loomis (Maria Bello, whose performance is one
of the film's highlights), who steals beggars' cups and offers to
give guys blow jobs in lieu of cash when she's shopping. She only
tells Billy that she'll be nice to him, however, and he agrees to
drive her across the country. The final pair are a middle-aged corporate businessman Todd
Woods (Paul Giamatti) and an ex-prisoner the cops are again
hunting, named Reggie (Andre Braugher). Todd's having a mid-life
crisis, but has been saved by karaoke. When he picks up the
hitchhiking Reggie, it's clear that Reggie's going to have his
chance to be saved too. Although the film revolves around all its characters, Todd is
the focal point, and this is one of the films problems. Having
spent the past 18 months of his career trying to ruin a turtle's
breeding ground in the name of a new fun park, he's suddenly
wondering about the values of corporate America. Couldn't he see
from the outset that what he was doing was screwed? Yet somehow
we're supposed to feel sorry for him as he turns proselytiser,
warning others about the conversion of America to strip malls,
but finding himself whole again when he's standing in front of a
blue-screen karaoke machine, popping beta-blockers to still his
nerves. Yes, it's this art-form from Japan, home of the neon light and
consumerism, that's supposed to be giving Ricky his new lease on
life. "I can't go back to being who I was before. I sing. I'm
different now," he tells his baby-faced wife. Somehow I don't
think director Bruce Paltrow is aware of the irony of karaoke
being the safety net of Ricky's leap from sad middle-class
existence, that he has to find solace in adding his unique voice
to tinny background music that's usually the last thing in the
world anyone would really want to dance to. But in Duets, the crowds are joyful. The crowds clap wildly
and mouth words that don't match the music actually playing, and
they look like they're really digging the music too. It just
doesn't gel. The characters peppering this meandering road movie are either
flat or too much of a caricature themselves to be believable.
Fatally, I found myself wishing to watch a documentary about the
real people who inhabit this intriguing world of glitz and
glamour. Now there's an idea for a good movie… |
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All material copyright Samantha Brown 1997-2005 | ||||||||||||||
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