Catch-22 Movie Review
Catch-22 Review
"Catch-22" Overview

Rating: R
1970
Cast and Crew
Director : Mike NicholsProducer : John Calley,Martin Ransohoff
Screenwiter : Buck Henry
Starring : Alan Arkin,Martin Balsam,Richard Benjamin,Art Garfunkel,Jack Gilford,Buck Henry,Bob Newhart,Anthony Perkins,Paula Prentiss,Martin Sheen,Jon Voight,Orson Welles,Bob Balaban,Susanne Benton,Norman Fell,Charles Grodin,Austin Pendleton
A wry and sarcastic (and thick as hell) book about the ridiculous duplicity of
war? Sounds like a movie to me.
And so it did to Mike Nichols and Buck Henry, collaborators on The Graduate who
conspired once again to make one of the greats of cinema. While Catch-22 has
none of the cachet of other war movies (and we'll get to that...), it's by far
one of the best out there, ranking with Platoon, Full Metal Jacket, and
Apocalypse Now as one of the greats.
If you've never read Joseph Heller's masterpiece of a novel, it'll take some
explaining to make Catch-22 make sense to you. As the title suggests -- or
rather, as the title inspired a phrase that entered into the American lexicon
-- our hero Yossarian (Alan Arkin) is trapped by a paradox. As a bombardier
who's ready to get out of the Mediterannean during WWII after doing his time,
he implores the base doctor (Jack Gilford) to pronounce him insane so he can be
shipped home. Since the rules state that insane men can't fly combat missions,
he's home free, right? Unfortunately, there's a catch: any man who tries to
get out of combat must not be insane, and therefore he has to fly.
That's just the beginning. Catch-22 spirals increasingly out of control, as
over-the-top ridiculousness takes hold of the base and all of its crew. The
terminus of this occurs when Milo Minderbinder (Jon Voight, perhaps the best
part of the film) engineers the bombing of his base in order to get the Germans
to buy warehouses full of chocolate-covered cotton that he has foolishly
purchases (by trading the parachutes, morphine, and diesel engines lying
around). Milo's "syndicate" speaks to the arrogance and greed of government --
not only in wartime, but in the everyday world.
While Catch-22 tends to flag around the 1:20 mark, it's nonetheless a great
achievement for all involved. Why didn't the public eat it up? Presumably it
has something to do with a little film called M*A*S*H, which debuted the same
year. Audiences like phony funerals better than real ones, it seems.
Full of ancient film legends (like Orson Welles and Marcel Dalio) as well as
newer ones (like Bob Newhart, Anthony Perkins, and Voight), this is a movie to
be seen and treasured anew on the freshly-released DVD. On a commentary track,
director Nichols banters with Steven Soderbergh (no, he had nothing to do with
the film -- he was 7 years old when it was made) about the hazy,
"trance-stricken" creation of the film.
Recommended.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





