Director : Joe Wright
Producer : Gary Foster, Russ Krasnoff
Screenwriter : Susannah Grant
Starring : Jamie Foxx, Robert Downey Jr., Catherine Keener, Tom Hollander, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Nelsan Ellis
Joe Wright's worlds-colliding drama The Soloist has so many strikes against it
that it's hard to imagine coming out the other end feeling anything but relief
that it was over. Think of it: a based-on-a-true-story about a cold-hearted
journalist who meets a mentally disturbed homeless man who just happens to be a
world-class musician. Together, the two strike up a unique friendship against
the backdrop of Los Angeles's Dickensian skid row and imploding newspaper
industry; a bright flower blooming from the crack in a downtown sidewalk. Also,
one of the men happens to be black and the other white.
On paper, the treacle-meter for The Soloist is nearly off the charts. But while
Wright (Atonement) hasn't fashioned anything like a classic, and the screenplay
by Susannah Grant (Erin Brockovich) is frequently thin on motivation, the film
is not even close to the disaster that it should have been. This is higher
praise than it may sound.
Right off, it's clear that both leads are at the top of their game in a story
that normally brings out the worst in actors of this caliber. As columnist
Steve Lopez, Robert Downey Jr. could have been your bad-boy big-city journalist
stereotype -- think Russell Crowe in the recent State of Play. And Jamie Foxx,
playing fallen musical prodigy Nathaniel Ayers, could have fallen into the trap
of playing his character's problems for tears instead of understanding. Just at
the point when these two highly-praised actors should be swimming in
overconfidence, they turn in performances as deft and graceful as anything
either has ever done. In these actors' hands, neither of these characters is
anything like a caricature, despite a story that cries out for them.
A lengthy and stylistically fractured segment following Lopez through a serious
bicycling accident and its results introduces us not just to his ad-hoc writing
method but also to the pell-mell newsroom, as wondrously deglamorized as any
true ink-stained wretch could hope for. Lopez seems a sardonic and selfish
crank, but not an inordinate one considering the business, and certainly not a
man who needs a jolt of true experience to jump-start the dead battery of his
humanity.
Only after creating Lopez as a real person does the film bring on Ayers,
playing Beethoven mournfully in a downtown park, on a violin with only two
strings. A gentle guy who spent a couple years at Juilliard in the early 1970s
before mental illness got the better of him, Ayers lives most of his life in a
fog, unable for instance to understand why just because Lopez is standing right
next to him means that Lopez can't also be flying the jetliner passing
overhead. His dialogue is a circuitous loop of memories and manias, with the
prodigy he truly is able to flicker through only occasionally.
The two men's problematic friendship is immediate, and brilliantly played.
Lopez desperately wants to help Ayers, and goes to extreme lengths to do so
(contacting his family, trying to get him into new housing), but the film
doesn't pretend his motives are entirely altruistic. At no point is Lopez given
the sort of slap-on-the-back adulation expected from such a four-square
humanitarian story. In fact, the one scene that should have been his reward for
all those days trying to help return Ayers to a more structured life and
hanging out down on skid row is cut short. At a banquet honoring Lopez, instead
of seeing his heart-swelling speech, we get his drunk ex-wife and boss (played
by Catherine Keener, who only seems to show up when somebody needs their teeth
kicked in verbally) lacerating him for exploiting Ayers. (One of the homeless
shelter workers, played to no-nonsense perfection by Nelsan Ellis, also does a
memorable job of cutting Lopez's self-serving naïveté to ribbons.)
Just as the film (mostly) dances a fine line between finding the soul in Ayers
and Lopez's friendship without romanticizing it, it also provides an unusually
humane portrait of the homeless. Several of the skid row-set scenes and
flashbacks to Ayers' mental breakup have a flickering horror to them that
recalls some of Wright's wartime set pieces in Atonement. But these moments
still find space within them to present the damaged souls who washed up on
those downtown streets as human beings, not freakish figures to be pitied or
feared. The Soloist seems less interested in twisting its people and plot into
moral lessons than it is in displaying each of its characters as individuals
deserving of being regarded on their own terms.
Probably the best lesson one can take away from The Soloist is that there is no
lesson to be taken, unless it is that one should treat one's fellow man with
respect, and if you needed a movie to tell you that, well....
Two strings short.
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Rating: PG-13, 2009
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