Entertainment - by Derrick Koo on Thursday, October 30, 2008 16:23 - 7 Comments

“Synecdoche, New York” Reviews Are As Confusing As the Movie Itself

I’d say I’m an average moviegoer. I’m no film student, but I know who Charlie Kaufman is and that I loved Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (and not just because Jim Carrey and that guy who played Frodo are in it). So where do I turn to find out whether it’s worth blowing my twelve bucks on Synecdoche, New York, Charlie’s latest mindfuck of a movie and first voyage as captain of his own ship? Rotten Tomatoes, of course. But now things get really confusing, and the movie hasn’t even started yet.

Here’s Manohla Dargis, that trusted backbone of the New York Times movies section, claiming that “Synecdoche, New York is one of the best films of the year.” Great. Let’s see it. But wait—right next to her is Rex Reed of the New York Observer warning that “no matter how bad you think the worst movie ever made ever was, you have not seen Synecdoche, New York.” What the hell?

This dichotomy says a lot more about Synecdoche, New York than you might think. Charlie Kaufman is a polarizing figure, but even people who didn’t fancy seeing Nicholas Cage’s face doubly in Adaptation could find something to identify with and like in that film. Now, with Synecdoche, Kaufman has raised the stakes so high that you can’t just say that you kind of liked it, except for Philip Seymour Hoffman’s bald cap. You have to call it the best movie of the year, or the worst movie of all time. It comes down to a basic, divisive question of human nature, one which strikes at the very core of why we watch movies.

Do you think that great art is necessarily challenging, that it must say something profound that resonates with the deepest unknown corners of everyone’s dark soul—and that you can recognize and appreciate great art even if you have no idea what the hell is going on? Then Synecdoche, New York is one of the best movies of the year.

“It’s extravagantly conceptual but also tethered to the here and now,” gushes Manohla, “which is why, for all its flights of fancy, worlds within worlds and agonies upon agonies, it comes down hard for living in the world with real, breathing, embracing bodies pressed against other bodies.” And if you understand what she’s talking about, then this movie is for you.

If, on the other hand, you believe that movies should be enjoyable or at least watchable—that they must contain something concrete to empathize with even if you understand the humor in rhyming Schenectady with “synecdoche”—then perhaps Rex is more your guy.

“There is no lack of seriousness in Synecdoche, New York,” he says, “just a lack of psychological development and narrative flow, and that is just about all the cinema needs to battle the demons of doubt and death waiting outside in the real world while we dream a bit in the dark about a more benign and orderly universe.”

Right on, Rex. I don’t want to escape the insanity of the world I live in only to get grabbed by the throat and tossed into the even more disturbing and confusing insanity of Charlie Kaufman’s. If you, too, feel this way, consider steering clear. There’s more to life than forcing yourself to enjoy something just because it’s supposed to be great art.

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7 Comments

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dene chen
Oct 30, 2008 16:48

Rex Reed is kinda a hack, and, quite fairly, I have no way to prove that except say that it’s my personal opinion.

For movie reviews, I usually go to Pajiba.com because I find that I usually like what i like and dislike waht they dislike.

Justin Spees
Oct 30, 2008 17:07

It’s really not that difficult a movie. Everything that he’s trying to say is right there. The only question you have to ask yourself is, do you think its possible to cram the entirety of life into a movie, and if not, would you be willing to watch someone try?

Alaina Stamatis
Nov 12, 2008 17:07

listen to Manohla

JD Burgener
Nov 15, 2008 9:13

I saw it last night and will need to see it again, maybe twice more. It reminds me of Hieronymus Bosch. Not that pleasant and perhaps not that important. But certainly something is there if you are willing to take the time to look for it.

Fresh DopeBoy
Nov 20, 2008 10:13

It is very difficult to conceive of a movie much more complex than synecdoche. Yet, oddly, I have no desire to see it again just so that I might resolve something. Not because I disliked it, but because so many scenes were indelibly imprinted within my mind such that I “get it”. That is, I “get it” as much as can be expected. My first impression as the movie started was that “dialogue” was the entertainment. Actually, for this reason (i.e., dialogue), I would see this movie again. However, because the dialogue heightened my awareness of the same, it became easily perceptible when dialogue began to yield its place to various “prop devices” as the centerpiece of entertainment. I’m not necessarily using the phrase “prop devices” as disapproval because we sometimes present ourselves as silly when we, for example, indicate that such and such should not exist or should be replaced by such and such. In many cases, we would have then simply created “another movie”. In this case, maybe we should make our own movie. That’s when some of us would realize just how difficult it is to actually make one of these things. Some of the devices (literary or cinematographic) used by Kaufman were stunning or spectacular! For example, the “voice” of Adele’s (Cotard’s wife played by Catherine Keener) miniature paintings, and the paintings themselves, were used to great effect. The creation of a “New York within New York” presents very interesting and creative cinematography. The work (make-up, costume, and lighting) performed to create the illusion of aging characters is also very well done. And while the seemingly non-stop, nested twists and turns might make one dizzy, it is just this unexpected variety that provided a journey instead of just another movie. Philip Seymour Hoffman continues to deliver. I found his performance to be communicative and almost accessible to the touch, as one is almost unaware that he is acting. This gives us the feeling that we know him. We then become comfortable with him, and finally empathetic.

This movie comes at you in layers of interwoven humanness. Every message invited the audience to think about themselves, their families, their lives, their legacy, their meaning, and their relationships. Caden Cotard (main character played by Philip Seymour Hoffman) was chronically, and strangely ill. There was a scene where Cotard, after receiving permission from his wife Adele, urinated in a sink while his wife and young daughter were both present in the room (present, but not watching). His urine appeared to be mostly blood yet he offered no reaction at all and simply carried on as if the absurd had become the expected. His sickness seemed to symbolize the loneliness that is concomitant with the very individuality necessary in order to qualify as an autonomous human being. If we die alone, are we in fact alone? Of course, this movie is about much more than that. No doubt, most of the criticism of this movie will be that it is far too ambitious. But what do we want? Do we want movies that only fit within our conventional range of pace, dialogue, boundaries, and cinematography? It seems that conventional movies will continue to appear with great frequency so, they will be readily available, but movies like Synecdoche are rare. Nevertheless, there were quite a few things that I did not like. While Phillip Seymour Hoffman very convincingly depicted the kind of leg tremors that might be caused by neuropathy, I found his enactment of a seizure to be so unconvincing that I actually laughed aloud. Interestingly enough, there was a gentleman one row up and about 10 seats to my right, who clearly did not like my idea of “funny”. – Although one got the strong impression that the gentleman expected everyone within 200 feet of him to “synchronize” with his idea of good comedic timing, as he outscored us all with his use of laughter aloud — And that is one of the effects of the complexity of this film; that is, though this film might be easily regarded as “despairing”, there were many funny moments where laughter erupted even while surrounded by loss and brokenness; just like real life. Sometimes, though, brilliance might not be brilliance; sometimes it just might be simple depravity disguised as something intellectual and modern. For example, while I love Tom Noonan’s work in most everything he does, I did not like Kaufman’s wording of his character’s pitch to play Cotard. – Obviously, this “play” is not a real play, but a montage of a construct that represents the mind, fears, and philosophies of Cotard. While I would prefer dialogue that allows for the existence of things like intellectualism, the intelligentsia, modernity, and the avant-garde without requirement for homosexual references, don’t mistake my preference for a suggestion that anything should be changed in this movie. Since Cotard was not homosexual, parts of the movie seem to suggest it par for the course that all men somehow contend with homosexuality. This is not true. This is the movie that Charlie Kaufman wanted to make. No one can say that it should be anything other than what it is. I doubt that any of us will agree on much regarding this movie, as we don’t agree on much regarding life.

Justin Spees
Nov 20, 2008 17:55

I will never forgive myself for reading all of that. Please never comment on anything ever again. You suck.

Fresh DopeBoy
Dec 7, 2008 11:38

Dear Justin Spees,

Don’t be so hard on yourself. You probably don’t like what he wrote because “You suck”. I’m sorry that you’re a homosexual.

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