Ed Wood Movie Review
Ed Wood Review

"Ed Wood" Overview

Rating: R
1994
Cast and Crew
Director : Tim BurtonProducer : Tim Burton,Denise Di Novi
Screenwiter : Scott Alexander,Larry Karaszewski
Starring : Johnny Depp,Martin Landau,Sarah Jessica Parker,Patricia Arquette,Jeffrey Jones,G.D. Spradlin,Vincent D'Onofrio,Bill Murray
If you go into this biopic expecting lots of laughs, you may be disappointed.
The film's premise is the joke -- that the hapless director Ed Wood, Jr., the
most inept figure in the history of the creative arts, would be the subject of
a hagiography.
Keeping this disclaimer in mind, Ed Wood is a quietly hilarious movie. Every
actor is in on the joke, especially Johnny Depp, who plays Wood, and Martin
Landau, whose amazing portrayal of the aged Bela Lugosi won him an Oscar. Every
frame of this movie conveys the tragicomedy of Wood's life (director Tim Burton
made this film after scoring big with Batman; he seems to view Wood's career
with an ambivalent "there but for the grace of God go I" attitude).
The only problem with Burton's film is that the story may be hard to believe
(or even follow) without knowledge of the historical details. Myth and reality
are hard to separate at this point, but the facts are seemingly these: Ed Wood
was an ex-carnie lured by the glamour of Hollywood in the 1940s. Had he become
merely a hack movie director, he would be utterly forgotten, but Wood also
heard the siren call of Art and, at random and unpredictable times, embedded
dialogue advocating transvestism, among other baffling non sequiturs, in his B
movies. (Wood liked to wear women's clothes.) Wood's movies are now the
benchmark that really bad movies are measured by.
Laughable special effects and bad acting are routine, but there are even more
fundamental elements of filmmaking which Wood also didn't understand; this is
what makes his movies unforgettable. The flying saucers in his Plan 9 From
Outer Space are obviously paper plates, but what makes the film dumbfounding is
that the saucers contain vampires, who spend minutes of screen time marching
slowly through a cemetery, grunting. Wood's chance meeting with Lugosi, then an
elderly junkie, gave him the chance to work with a "big name," but instead of
making a horror movie, Wood first uses Lugosi to narrate monologues about
cross-dressing. For his first horror film, Wood steals a giant octopus puppet
from a studio lot, which had to be manipulated by the victim; to fill out the
movie, he splices in minutes of boring octopus footage from a nature
documentary. Finally, while filming Plan 9, the decrepit Lugosi passes.
Undaunted, Wood hires a chiropractor to play Lugosi for the last half of the
movie -- the actor keeps his cape partly over his face, like vampires do, so
Wood assumed nobody would notice.
A few scenes in Ed Wood are perhaps over the top -- for example, a mythical
conversation between Wood and Orson Welles, in which Welles encourages Wood to
be true to himself. But mostly, Burton tells this bizarre story straight. The
movie ends at an upbeat moment -- the premiere of Plan 9 (which of course did
not have a long run in theaters). The final narration explains that Wood
continued in the same vein through the 1960s, trying his hand at porno
(apparently, his shortcomings as a director were so extreme that even his porn
films were unsuccessful) before dying an unhappy alcoholic in the 1970s. The
ending seems abrupt, but it's consistent with Burton's bittersweet storytelling
to end with one of the moments of success that, in his own mind (only), Wood
reached.
Critics agree that Wood's works fall short of artistic success -- shorter than
any other movies ever made. (Maybe if Wood had access to another octopus puppet
-- or more dry ice -- his vision could have been fully realized...) But of
course, Wood is better known today than many directors of his era who were
talented and skilled. Perhaps this says a lot about the lowbrow, trivializing
tendencies of our culture. Perhaps it means nothing at all. Burton's film takes
us back to Hollywood's golden age, pays a final tribute to this pathetic
director, and draws no conclusions.
The highly anticipated DVD adds copious extras to this unique film, including
deleted scenes and a commentary track from Burton, Landau, and several others.
Four featurettes round out a must-have disc.
You gotta hand it to him.
Reviewer: David Bezanson





