Full Frontal Movie Review
Full Frontal Review

"Full Frontal" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Steven SoderberghProducer : Gregory Jacobs,Scott Kramer
Screenwiter : Coleman Hough
Starring : Blair Underwood,Julia Roberts,David Hyde Pierce,Catherine Keener,Mary McCormack,Erika Alexander,Rainn Wilson,David Duchovny,Enrico Colantoni,Nicky Katt
For the uninitiated who know Steven Soderbergh only as the auteur behind such
delights as Traffic and the Ocean's Eleven remake, know that Soderbergh was
once far better known as a god of the indie film scene, the man behind movies
like sex, lies & videotape, King of the Hill, and Schizopolis.
Like King of the Hill and the groundbreaking videotape, some of this work is
genius.
Like the idiotic Schizopolis and the atrocious Kafka, some of this work is
total crap.
Thank heaven that while Full Frontal is one of Soderbergh's most experimental
works to date, it's also one of his best.
Explaining the film within a film within a film within a film of a plot
requires some doing, so either pay close attention or skip this section
altogether. Over the course of a single day, a gaggle of L.A. movie insiders
find their lives oddly intertwined. There are Catherine and Nicholas (Julia
Roberts and Blair Underwood) -- with her reporter interviewing his big-time
movie star. There is Lee (Catherine Keener), a bitter movie studio executive,
her writer husband (David Hyde Pierce), and her masseuse sister (Mary McCormack
in her first satisfying film role in years). Then there's indie theater
director Arty (Enrico Colantoni), and the star of his show "The Sound and the
Fuhrer," Hitler (Nicky Katt).
It isn't until about halfway through the film that you realize Catherine and
Nicholas are actually characters in a movie taking place within Full Frontal.
Although a faux credits sequence takes place at the front end of the film,
Soderbergh's odd structure doesn't really gel until Catherine rips off her wig
(the worst of Roberts' career), and promptly falls into her erstwhile character
of Francesca, a Julia-like movie star in her own right. And rest assured there
are more twists in store for us down the road….
We go behind the curtain when we realize that Soderbergh is using rich lighting
and full 35mm film for the Catherine-Nicholas vignettes (a film entitled
Rendezvous) but is using what appears to be a cheap toy camera for the "real
life" scenes, which play out in the offices and hotels of Los Angeles. But are
we ever really out of the movies? Soderbergh positively floods the production
with insidery film jokes and gags to make us think not: Terence Stamp, in
character and muttering lines from Soderbergh's The Limey, appears at various
times; Underwood makes a crack about Roberts' cut love scene with Denzel
Washington from The Pelican Brief; Fight Club director David Fincher appears
briefly as the director of a film being shot within Rendezvous… and starring
Brad Pitt. The gags come so fast, I don't know how many other inside jokes I
missed.
And that's kind of the point -- assuming Soderbergh has one -- that Hollywood's
work product and Hollywood's reality are indistinguishable. It's not a
particularly inventive theme after decades of The Players and The Big Pictures,
but Soderbergh imbues so much creativity and moxie into his story's telling
that it merits real attention. The production itself is front-loaded with
quirks, with Soderbergh attaching a note that traveled with the screenplay to
prospective stars, telling them (among other points) that: "You will drive
yourself to the set. If you are unable to drive yourself, a driver will pick
you up, but you will probably become the subject of ridicule." "You will pick,
provide, and maintain your own wardrobe." "There will be no trailers." And "You
will have fun whether you want to or not."
The semi-improvised film works thanks to its insane hilarity, and the cast has
plenty of fun chewing the scenery. Pierce is by far the notable standout, and
even the long-forgotten Underwood is apt in his role. But while I'm the first
to admit Hollywood is completely phony, it may not be as over-the-top as, say,
Keener's crazed HR executive is. Stand on a chair and recite the countries in
Africa, rapid-fire while she screams at you? Ummmm, not even in Hollywood,
Steve.
Still, as often as Keener (and it's mostly her character) rips us out of the
action, our voyeuristic presence throughout the film makes for breezy and
wildly self-referential fun. Soderbergh hasn't really outdone Altman's seminal
work on the subject, but if his goal was to make Peoria think Hollywood has its
communal head placed firmly within its communal anus, well, his work is done.
As expected, tons of deleted material appear on the Full Frontal DVD, including
an excised storyline where Keener's character gets arrested in the porno shop.
The full "rules" of the film are included along with outtakes from Soderbergh's
on-set spy cam, and a feature-length commentary from Soderbergh and writer
Coleman Hough. Highly recommended.
Julia with hairstylist (fired).
Reviewer: Christopher Null





