Choke Movie Review
Choke Review

"Choke" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Clark GreggProducer : Beau Flynn,Tripp Vinson,Temple Fennell
Screenwiter : Clark Gregg
Starring : Sam Rockwell,Anjelica Huston,Kelly Macdonald,Brad William Henke
Let's face it: No one thought Fight Club would be anything other than another
flash of David Fincher directorial determination when it first came out.
Critics and audiences were not enamored with the machismo and mayhem epic, even
with stars Edward Norton and Brad Pitt in the lead. No, it took a few years for
the cinematic scales to fall from everyone's eyes, turning a cult flick into a
classic. Perhaps actor turned auteur Clark Gregg is hoping for the same
time-aided appreciation. His interpretation of Club author Chuck Palahniuk's
novel Choke is equally quirky and unsettled. One senses, however, no future
re-evaluation for this uneven effort.
Since leaving medical school, sex addict Victor Mancini (Sam Rockwell) has
worked tirelessly to keep his mentally deranged mother (Anjelica Huston) in a
private nursing home. By day, he's a "historical recreationist" at a local
colonial village. By night, he travels to various restaurants around town and
pretends to choke. Once saved, he hits up his good Samaritan marks for any and
all kinds of financial assistance. Desperate to learn who his father is, Victor
teams up with a new doctor named Paige Marshall (Kelly Macdonald) to decipher
his mother's memories, as well as translate an old diary which may provide some
clues. Of course, in between consultations, it's nothing but fornication and
copulation.
Choke has one of those titles which describes its success as a film to a
succinct single syllable. Like the talented athlete who can't get his team into
the playoffs, or a golfer that muffs the easy putt for championship glory,
Gregg's riff on Palahniuk's concepts (the film varies somewhat from the book)
never delivers the knockout blow. Instead, we end up with several interesting
narrative threads that barely hold together.
At any given moment, we are intrigued by Victor's rate of random intercourse,
his unusual past with his nonconformist mother, the beefy best friend Denny
(well played by Brad William Henke) who can't stop touching himself, and the
determined doctor offering hope to our hapless hero. But Gregg can't locate a
way to connect the dots, to make the various outlandish allusions add up to
something substantial. Instead, Choke is a movie of moments -- some good, some
groan-inducing, and a few that make no friggin' sense whatsoever. But thanks to
aggressive turns by Rockwell and a beaming Huston (she steals every scene she
is in, including the '70s-spiced flashbacks), we are willing to stick with the
struggles.
Gregg clearly forgets that most of Palahniuk's prose is punditry. Fight Club
centered on the emasculation of the modern male. Survivor mocked our
always-crass consumerism. By making the title con a mere sidebar, by
substituting another "twist ending" for more of the author's takes on addiction
and conspiracy theorizing, Gregg undercuts the meaning of his movie. Instead,
he hopes to get by on the oddness of ideas, the jarring juxtaposition between a
parent dying of Alzheimer's and a son who can't keep his libido in check. Toss
in Victor's unusual possible ancestry (let's just say he's entitled to a God
complex) and you've got nothing but nutty non-sequiturs.
Still, if one is capable of completely forgetting the normative needs of a
movie, if they can back off from the occasionally confrontational approaches to
simply enjoy some fine performances, Choke will go down easy. All the shock and
schlock posturing will have very little influence on your possible enjoyment.
But for anyone who found Fight Club a manifesto for a less-numbing new world
order, Gregg's interpretation of this part of Palahniuk will feel like a minor
message at best.
Late for the Renaissance faire.
Reviewer: Bill Gibron





