DIRECTOR
Spike
Lee
SCREENWRITERS
Victor
Colicchio
Michael Imperioli
Spike Lee
PRODUCERS
Jon Kilik
Spike Lee
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Ellen Kuras
MUSIC
Terence Blanchard
EDITOR
Barry Alexander Brown
CAST
John Leguizamo (Vinny)
Mira Sorvino (Dionna)
Jennifer Esposito (Ruby)
Adrien Brody (Ritchie)
Michael Rispoli (Joe T)
Bebe Neuwirth (Gloria)
Saverio Guerra (Woodstock)
Patti LuPone (Helen)
Spike Lee (Reporter John Jeffries)
Mike Starr (Eddie)
Anthony LaPaglia (Detective Petrocelli)
Roger Guenveur Smith (Detective Atwater)
Ben Gazzara (Luigi)
John Savage (Simon)
Jimmy Breslin (Himself)
Michael Badalucco (David Berkowitz)
Michael Imperioli (Midnight)
John Turturro (voice of Harvey the Black Dog)
Kim Director (Dee)
Joie Lee (Bed Stuy Woman)
MPAA rating: R
Running
time: 142m
U.S. release: July 2, 1999
Video availability: VHS - DVD
other spike
lee joints
reviewed on this website:
- bamboozled
- clockers
- 4 little girls
- get on the bus
- he got game
- inside man
- malcolm x
- 25th hour
|
Can
a high-powered director triumph over a weak script? It's possible,
I suppose, but most often improbable. In Summer of Sam,
Spike Lee exhausts his bag of tricks, trying to keep the energy
level up, and parts of the movie are affecting or exciting. But
after a while you grow weary of being pelted with the director's
pyrotechnics. It's like watching a stunningly edited and photographed
video tour of one's own basement. The form is fine; it's the
content that's missing. By the end, Lee seems to be blaring "Won't
Get Fooled Again" just to keep himself, and us, awake.
The film begins on a corny note, with Jimmy Breslin addressing
the camera and setting the scene: In the steamy summer of 1977,
David Berkowitz, aka Son of Sam, lurked around New York City
shooting lovers in their parked cars. The movie proper, after
the prologue, starts compellingly enough to get one's hopes up.
One hot dark night, with ABBA's cheerful "Fernando"
playing on the radio, two attractive young women sit in their
car chatting. They notice a hulking shape outside; seconds later,
their brains are on the windshield. Spike Lee is great at the
mood of dread and menace: the killer approaching from the shadows,
the abrupt flash of violence, the sense that something ugly and
unstoppable is out there in the dark, somewhere. New York in
the summer of 1977 is a seething playground of sex and drugs
and disco; suddenly a monster is loose in the playground, as
if summoned by a wrathful god to keep sinners locked up in their
homes.
Unfortunately, the film moves from there into a kaleidoscopic
look at the people in the neighborhood and how the murders affect
them; problem is, there are no people, just types. Spike
Lee had originally intended to executive-produce the script by
Michael Imperioli and Victor Colicchio; when he decided to direct
it, he tweaked the script. He should've kept tweaking. The main
characters, in terms of screen time, appear to be an unhappy
married couple, Vinny and Dionna (John Leguizamo and Mira Sorvino),
and a punk-rocker, Ritchie (Adrien Brody), Vinny's old friend,
who has been away from the neighborhood for a year and has now
returned with spiky hair and a Johnny Rotten accent. Right away,
the locals suspect Ritchie of being Son of Sam, even though the
M.O. of any serial killer is to blend in, to walk among us unnoticed;
the gaudy Ritchie does neither.
We spend entirely too much time with Vinny and Dionna, a bland
pair with sexual hang-ups; he's cheating on her because he doesn't
know how to ask her for the erotic favors he craves. Improbably,
they find themselves at an orgy at Plato's Retreat, after which
their relationship predictably goes south, in a naturalistic,
Cassavetes-like series of arguments that seem to assume we take
these two limited squabblers seriously. Meanwhile, Ritchie hooks
up with the neighborhood pump Ruby (the underused Jennifer Esposito)
and forms a punk-rock band, setting Berkowitz's psycho-poetry
(as published in the New York Post) to grinding "music."
During all this, a group of oafish Italians roam around making
a list of suspects, and even the mob determines to catch the
killer, as in Fritz Lang's M. There is more sex, more
drugs, much fighting and posturing and paranoid finger-pointing.
We don't really know why we're watching all of this.
As always, Lee works with a talented cast -- he's one of those
directors with the prestige and clout to lure top actors into
reading from the phone book for peanuts -- yet the fragmented
structure works against them, and in any case, they're given
very little to play except hysteria. Patti LuPone shows she's
a good sport by letting herself fall out of her dress; Bebe Neuwirth
grinds her body against Leguizamo's groin. The women are highly
sexualized, the men hapless and borderline impotent (Vinny is
popular with the ladies despite being a very quick come). Almost
by default, the movie focuses on Vinny's struggles with Dionna
and his conflicted feelings about his old friend Ritchie. Vinny
swallows ludes and flails about, and I expected the script to
take him to the edge of ultimate paranoia: thinking that he himself
could be Son of Sam and not even realize it. The movie doesn't
seem to think of that, and poor Leguizamo, chalky and pouring
sweat, turns into a dinner-theater version of Ray Liotta near
the end of GoodFellas. Leguizamo can be a loose, funny
actor, but here he's straining too much for effects -- much like
his director.
Working with editor Barry Alexander Brown (who has cut many other
Spike Lee joints) and cinematographer Ellen Kuras (Swoon,
4
Little Girls), Lee puts together an engaging pastiche
of images. You never question that you're in the hands of a moviemaker
who thinks with his eyes. Yet Lee can't seem to decide whether
he's making a neighborhood portrait or a tabloid-flashy bit of
exploitation -- there are too many overdone scenes of Berkowitz
(Michael Badolucco) freaking out in his ratty apartment like
the villain of some squalid slasher flick, and Lee piles on the
K-Tel oldies, often so loudly that we can't hear what the characters
are saying.
Not that it makes much difference most of the time. Summer
of Sam is the perfect New York companion piece to the L.A.-set
Boogie
Nights -- it scampers around, never pausing long enough
to allow any one character to gain purchase in our hearts. It's
also overlong: at two hours and twenty-two minutes, this melodrama
with its paper-thin characters and predetermined outcome puts
considerable stress on our patience. A great movie could be made
about a blistering New York summer that brings neighborhood tensions
to a boil of violence. Spike Lee can make that movie; in fact,
he already did, ten years ago. Summer of Sam suffers in
every conceivable way in comparison to Do the Right Thing,
and contrasting the two films proves what Spike Lee can do when
he has his heart in the material and fire in his belly, and what
he can't do when he doesn't. |