Delirious Movie Review
Delirious Review
"Delirious" Overview

Rating: NR
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Tom DiCilloProducer : Robert Salerno
Screenwiter : Tom DiCillo
Starring : Steve Buscemi,Michael Pitt,Alison Lohman,Gina Gershon
I have seen Steve Buscemi in person, and he is not particularly ratlike -- he's actually
a bit dapper, almost handsome. But on screen, Buscemi persists in embodying the most
rodentlike of characters -- twitchy, scraggly, often lurking in the shadows. His voi
cing of Templeton the (actual) rat in the live-action Charlotte's Web seemed less perfect
casting than foregone conclusion.
Buscemi's character in Tom DiCillo's Delirious is Les Galantine, a "licensed professional"
photographer who is undistinguished even by paparazzi standards and ratlike even
by Buscemi standards. An irritable loner, Les roams alleys and back entrances with
a pack of similar-minded (but slightly less desperate) shutterbugs, grasping for shots
of stars like pop sensation D'Harma (Alison Lohman). It's at one of these melees
that he bumps into the genially homeless Toby (Michael Pitt); soon Toby has a reluctant,
unstable ally and a place to stay. Les, in turn, has someone to listen to his rants
and delusions, and to accompany him on sad visits to his elderly parents -- unimpressed,
of course, with his published pictures.
Though we sense that most of Les's friendships will strain sooner rather than later
without outside factors, a rift develops between Les and Toby when the young protégé
makes actual human contact with D'Harma. The beatific Toby, against any number of
odds, begins to fulfill what could be a paparazzo's twisted fantasy: He actually makes
it to the other side of the lens, capturing D'Harma's fancy and becoming, if not
a genuine superstar, at least the kind of guy who might eventually appear on MTV
or VH1 during weekend marathons. Les can only simmer with resentment, occasionally exploding
into self-sabotaging fits of bad behavior.
Throughout all of this, and despite the repetition inevitable in dealing with a character
as compulsively stuck as Les, Delirious finds tiny moments of insight and, in its
pointy way, entertainment. The performances are key here, not just Buscemi's typically
fearless work but also Pitt's application of his slightly dreamy, occasionally creepy
angel-faced shtick. Alison Lohman has fun with what has become a modern comedy standby:
the Britney-Shakira-Ashlee-whoever hybrid, previously played by Anna Faris (Just Frien
ds), Haley Bennett (Music and Lyrics), and Sarah Michelle Gellar (Southland Tales). The quasi-spiritua
l pop tart may have gone a little stale as a comic conceit, but Lohman finds the
right degree of dippiness to lend her attraction to Toby a certain plausibility.
It's not that DiCillo's film says much about the orbit of celebrity that we haven't
heard before -- it's fleeting and shallow yet can generate an entire industry in
its outer rims. But as a character study, it's unflinching in the way it regards
both the humor (Les stores Toby in the closet of his shabby apartment) and misery
(the closet doesn't seem much worse than the rest of it) of its characters. The film
isn't as broadly funny as the previous DiCillo-Buscemi collaboration Living in Oblivion,
but its outsiders peering in have an uncomfortable resonance.
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger





