Infamous Movie Review
Infamous Review

"Infamous" Overview

Rating: R
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Douglas McGrathProducer : Jocelyn Hayes,Sidney Kimmel,Christine Vachon,Anne Walker-McBay
Screenwiter : Douglas McGrath
Starring : Toby Jones,Sandra Bullock,Daniel Craig,Jeff Daniels,Hope Davis,Sigourney Weaver,Lee Pace,Isabella Rossellini
If the cogs of the movie-making machine are going to keep turning out the exact
same movie, why do I have to write up a whole new review?
It's hard to keep an open mind when the synopsis – celebrated author Truman
Capote heads to Kansas after a quadruple homicide rocks a rural town, where he
becomes obsessed with one of the killers as he pens his book In Cold Blood –
perfectly describes not only the new release Infamous, but last year's Capote
just as well. To try to look at Infamous in a vacuum is disingenuous at best;
no one who will see this movie has not at least heard of the other.
And unfortunately for Infamous, that means it's doomed to be Capote's forgotten
sibling: This one is a year later, several Oscar nominations (and one win) shy,
and nowhere near as good. On its own, it may not be so bad, but in the scheme
of things, it's wholly redundant.
Writer-director Douglas McGrath's version of the story is based on the book
Truman Capote: In Which Various Friends, Enemies, Acquaintances and Detractors
Recall His Turbulent Career and as such features a variety of talking head
interviews of his contemporaries -- Gore Vidal, Diana Vreeland, Babe Paley --
attempting to explain the character that was Truman Capote. The device works
quite well, but is sadly only used for about 10 minutes or so (it pops up again
at the end, but by then it has been downgraded to voice-over treacle).
Infamous starts out quite amusingly, painting a charmingly superficial picture
of the high flying New York society scene of which Truman was queen bee. Toby
Jones plays Truman as a swishy little troll, a preposterous muppet in human
form, and he's entertaining as hell in the role. When Truman heads to Kansas to
write about how the town is affected by the murders, it's a pure
fish-out-of-water comedy. If it's not enough that Truman is five feet tall with
a cartoon voice and an urban sensibility, he shows up with a trousseau and a
full-length fur.
But from there on out, McGrath tells not only the exact same story, but in the
exact same way as Capote: Truman slowly wins over the town, begins interviewing
the two killers, and his obsession with one, Perry Smith (Daniel Craig), leads
virtually to his own ruin. And it's not merely that we've seen these
characters, this context, this story before; it's that Infamous lays them out
in the most straightforward, uncomplicated and uninteresting manner. Perry
opening up and talking about his past is not an unveiling, it's a flashback;
Truman's obsession is shown, but never explained; all of the story's
complexities are ironed out as pat as possible.
And sadly, the salvation is not to be found in the acting. Craig is entirely
too…rugged for the part of Perry. His inescapable manliness might be good news
to those worried about the fate of the Bond franchise, but it’s all wrong here.
He displays none of the tenderness that supposedly draws Capote to him. And so
much feels like stunt casting – Sandra Bullock as Harper Lee performs as though
in a community theatre production of Our Town, and Gwyneth Paltrow has three
very long minutes singing on screen as Peggy Lee in a pointless cameo.
It's not all bad – Jones won't get as much credit as Phillip Seymour Hoffman,
but he's wonderful as Truman. Hope Davis and Sigourney Weaver are similarly
entertaining as socialite swans (Weaver's casting, playing the wife of
legendary CBS president William S. Paley, is a charming little in-joke, as
Weaver is the real-life daughter of legendary NBC president Pat Weaver).
It's also, clearly, a great story. McGrath may have very much wanted to tell
it, but he was beaten to the punch, which should have killed Infamous as
extraneous. Because even if the story itself is very intriguing, go rent Capote
. Or even better yet, read In Cold Blood. Nothing beats an original.
Shoulda got the Bordeaux.
Reviewer: Anne Gilbert





