Hollywoodland Movie Review

Hollywoodland Movie Still

Cast & Crew

Director : Allen Coulter

Producer : Jake Myers, Glenn Williamson,

Screenwriter : Paul Bernbaum

Starring : Adrien Brody, Ben Affleck, Diane Lane, Bob Hoskins, Robin Tunney, Kathleen Robertson,

Who killed Superman?

George Reeves' death remains one of Hollywood's juiciest unsolved mysteries. After years spent clinging to the industry's fringe, the performer shot to stardom in 1952 when he hopped into Superman's red-and-blue tights for a Saturday-morning serial. The role made Reeves an overnight sensation, but also damaged any chances he had of becoming a serious actor.

Off camera, Reeves (Ben Affleck) reportedly wallowed in a directionless affair with Toni Mannix (Diane Lane), the two-timing wife of MGM executive E.J. Mannix (Bob Hoskins). Seven years after agreeing to play the Man of Steel, an unsatisfied Reeves was discovered shot to death in his Beverly Hills bedroom while his selfish fiancée, Leonore Lemmon (Robin Tunney), and a handful of strangers, partied downstairs.

What happened? Did Mannix have Reeves murdered? Could Lemmon have pulled the trigger? Or did the actor finally give in to his depression and commit suicide? During production, when the movie was titled Truth, Justice and the American Way, director Allen Coulter's modern noir biopic of the late Superman star looked like it was going to try and solve the mystery behind the actor's peculiar death. But the studio changed the title, opting for the generic Hollywoodland, and Coulter switched his focus away from Reeves and onto Louis Simo (Adrien Brody), the two-bit, ambulance-chasing private detective who latched onto Reeves' case.

The decision might have been paid off, save for the fact that Simo's pedestrian troubles are far less interesting than the ones plaguing Reeves. He's separated from his wife (Molly Parker), sleeping with his assistant, and too drunk to notice the emotional damage he's inflicting on his only son. Brody's defiant attitude slices through Coulter's glum, leaden atmosphere. His dull domestic issues aside, Brody proves adept at playing the amoral, borderline-sleazy gumshoe and almost wrings some suspense from Reeves' unsolved murder. It's not unheard of for a movie detective to be more interesting than the corpse he (or she) is investigating. This just isn't one of those times.

It's worth noting Affleck's presence after a self-inflicted exile. The general consensus around Hollywood is that the actor's professional career is dead, done in by a lethal combination of tabloid overexposure (not always his fault) and a string of underperforming duds (almost always his fault). So it's morbidly appropriate that the first time we see the Oscar-winning star in Hollywoodland, he's a bloated, blue corpse resting peacefully on the mortuary's slab.

Things gradually improve for Big Ben. Told in golden-hued reverence, Reeves' flashbacks involve corruption that stretches from the studio system to the front offices of the L.A.P.D. Affleck and Lane are puffed-up and stilted, presenting these figures as if the industry elite never stopped overacting in the '40s. I'm giving Affleck the benefit of the doubt, assuming his stiff turn is because he calculated Reeves' inabilities as a natural performer. Regardless, the Reeves-Mannix affair is bolstered by luscious nostalgia, and I longed for more scenes recounting the day-to-day happenings in America's dream factory.

So rest easy, Bryan Singer. Even though your summer blockbuster took a beating in the press for going over budget, Superman Returns remains the more interesting of the Man of Steel movies released this year.

Try to break this glass with your heat vision, Supe.

More From Contactmusic.com

More From The Web

Write for us

Comments

Hollywoodland Rating

" Grim "

Rating: R, 2006

Editors Recommendations

Vampire Weekend's Billboard No.1 Is A Triumph For Independent Music

Indie rockers Vampire Weekend have topped the Billboard 200 chart with their latest record 'Modern Vampires of the City,'...

Vampire Weekend's Billboard No.1 Is A Triumph For Independent Music

Sweet Jesus! Jennifer Aniston Strips Down In 'We're The Millers' [Trailer]

Remember when the trailer for Horrible Bosses rolled out online? Yeah, the internet buckled under the weight...

Sweet Jesus! Jennifer Aniston Strips Down In 'We're The Millers' [Trailer]

Mick Jagger to camp at Glastonbury

Sir Mick Jagger will camp at Glastonbury. The singer is headlining with The Rolling Stones at...

Mick Jagger - Mick Jagger to camp at Glastonbury

Amanda Seyfried felt more attractive with 'huge breasts'

The 'Les Miserables' actress' figure has changed since she was a teenager and she admits being in the limelight...

Amanda Seyfried - Amanda Seyfried felt more attractive with 'huge breasts'

Laura Marling's 'Once I Was An Eagle' Soars With The Critics

Laura Marling looks to have made a stunning return with her new album Once I Was An Eagle...

Laura Marling's 'Once I Was An Eagle' Soars With The Critics

Is Paris Hilton About To Sign Up With Lil Wayne's Cash Money Crew?

Paris Hilton looks to have her career path mapped out for the next few years, as the heiress is...

Is Paris Hilton About To Sign Up With Lil Wayne's Cash Money Crew?

Helen Flanagan Bemuses Londoners With Skimpy Outfit At PETA Event [Pictures]

Helen Flanagan doesn't do things by halves does she? The 22-year-old Coronation Street actress took to Covent Garden...

Helen Flanagan Bemuses Londoners With Skimpy Outfit At PETA Event [Pictures]

The Butler - Trailer

Cecil Gains is a devoted White House butler who grew up on a simple cotton farm where he and other black workers...

The Butler Trailer


More recommendations

Adrien Brody Newsletter

Subscribe to this news alert service to receive news and reviews on Adrien Brody

Unsubscribe | Unsubscribe All

Films by Artist: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ