Hollywood Ending Movie Review
Hollywood Ending Review

"Hollywood Ending" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Woody AllenProducer : Letty Aronson,Helen Robin
Screenwiter : Woody Allen
Starring : Woody Allen,George Hamilton,Téa Leoni,Debra Messing,Mark Rydell,Treat Williams,Tiffani-Amber Thiessen,Barney Cheng
Hollywood Ending – a trite, ugly, and self-indulgent tangent into the complex
neurosis of one of American’s greatest film directors – stands as Woody Allen’s
biggest failure in a decade.
Allen plays Val Waxman, a two-dimensional, washed-up film director with a bad
case of hypochondria and a reputation in the industry that is on par with
Michael Cimino. In order to resurrect his career, Waxman’s ex-wife Ellie (Téa
Leoni) persuades her studio bigwig boyfriend Hal (Treat Willams) and his
over-tanned studio executive cronie Ed (George Hamilton) to hand over the
directing duties of their new big-budget noir remake set in Manhattan. Once
the deal is done and the directing duties fall into his hands, Waxman’s various
neuroses finally catch up with him, and he ends up suffering (along with the
audience) from psychosomatic blindness.
With his career and the picture in jeopardy, Waxman enlists the help of his
agent Al (Mark Rydell), the cinematographer’s Chinese translator (the excellent
actor Barney Cheng, who the filmcritic.com staff have become oddly fanatical
about), and even his ex-wife/producer Ellie, to help guide the rickety ship to
a safe port without the suits finding out about his malady.
From this point on, Allen's surprisingly predictable screenwriting rears its
ugly head, veering into Chevy Chase pratfalls and cheap one-liners, made even
worse by a cast of B-movie chuckleheads like Treat Williams and George Hamilton.
After the first twenty minutes, the film repeats the scenes of Allen playing
the blind guy, stumbling around furniture and choosing inappropriate props, his
pandering toward much younger girls, and the co-dependent relationships among
Waxman, his ex-wife, and his agent – it’s all so very trite.
My analysis of Hollywood Ending is that Woody Allen attempted not to mock the
Hollywood studio system but rather to explore his own narcissism and
self-indulgence. Hell, it worked plenty well for Woody in the past, why not
now?
Screened at the 45th Annual San Francisco International Film Festival.
Allen, with fetish.
Reviewer: Max Messier





