Illuminata Movie Review
Illuminata Review
"Illuminata" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : John TurturroProducer : John Penotti,John Turturro
Screenwiter : Brandon Cole,John Turturro
Starring : Susan Sarandon,John Turturro,Rufus Sewell,Christopher Walken,Katherine,Borowitz,Georgina Cates,Bill Irwin,Matthew Sussman
The art of acting is fascinating and mysterious, even for the actors who
practice it. Unfortunately, for many artists, acting is too fascinating, and
they can't resist the temptation to over-analyze it and to make plays/films
about it. Playwright Brandon Cole and actor-director John Turturro, creators of
Illuminata, are the latest to succumb.
Turturro plays a dramatist, Tuccio, struggling to make his name in the
Manhattan theater scene at the turn of the century. Tuccio uses the unexpected
illness of an actor (played by Matthew Sussman) to convince the owners of a
Manhattan theater to chance his play, Illuminata. Unfortunately, that is not
only the movie's premise, but also most of the plot.
Like many of the European films Turturro pays homage to, Illuminata A) begins
with exasperating slowness, then B) picks up and forces the audience to become
involved with the characters, then C) loses the audience again with episodic
scenes that are never clearly resolved, then D) wraps everything up with (as
one character notes) "no ending." The turn-of-the-century setting makes for
some gorgeous costumes and sets, but 1905 is not remote enough in time to serve
any obvious purpose (except to excuse the dated subject matter).
The cast --- including Susan Sarandon, Turturro, and Turturro's wife Katherine
Borowitz --- is absolutely first-rate, but mostly wasted. Only the ever-twitchy
Christopher Walken is inspired --- playing a flaming, Wildean theater critic
who savages all plays and all actors, except for those young male actors he
allows to accommodate his "rigid bone". It's the same controlled-freak
performance Walken always delivers, but it's great.
Like its predecessors in the play-about-a-play genre, Illuminata is full of
incestuous, behind-the-scenes soap operas involving the actors, and there are
plenty of clever one-liners about the meaning of acting. At one point, the cast
even breaks into that artiest of Shakespeare plays, The Tempest (which inspired
Derek Jarman to make a similarly self-indulgent film, back in 1979).
Both the play and the movie contain some very good love speeches, but not
enough backstory or emotional involvement to support them. The result is
suspiciously European (Smiles of a Summer Night, and other Bergman films, come
to mind). Turturro loads the film with philosophical soliloquies with no
preamble or depth, as if he were one of the European masters who can get away
with such things. The film's aimless middle is filled with Felliniesque sexual
burlesque. There's even an unexplained, overwrought, meaningless death scene of
an undeveloped character (the actor played by Sussman) --- a hallmark of
European art films.
If Illuminata were subtitled, it would probably get some four-star reviews. As
it is, it will probably be dismissed as a waste of talent on a product that is
all style, no substance. In the words of an old trouper (played by Ben Gazzara,
another great actor wasted in this movie), making movies like this is "no
profession for an adult."
Reviewer: David Bezanson





