Isn't She Great Movie Review
Isn't She Great Review

"Isn't She Great" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Andrew BergmanProducer : Mike Lobell
Screenwiter : Paul Rudnick
Starring : Bette Midler,Nathan Lane,Stockard Channing,David Hyde Pierce,Amanda Peet,John Cleese
I'll start by saying up front that I really don't admire Bette Midler. I find
her loud, hammy, a bit trashy, and generally obnoxious in every way. Oddly,
this instantly qualifies her to play novelist Jacqueline Susann, who was loud,
hammy, a bit trashy, and generally obnoxious in every way.
If the name Susann doesn't ring a bell, it's because you're too young.
"Jackie" was a washed-up actress and radio star when she penned her first
novel, The Valley of the Dolls, which went on to become, at its time, the
biggest selling novel ever. Why? In the late 60s the tale of drugs and lurid
sex against the backdrop of Hollywood was shocking. Now, it's quite tepid, and
so is this film, exploring Susann's rise to fame.
And fame is what our Jackie was after. She was what you might even call a fame
whore. She prays to a tree for fame. After getting cancer, she bargains with
God for ten more years of life so she can have more fame. Kids, this is not a
role model.
With the movie's tagline "Talent isn't everything," our heroes hope to inspire
the wretches of the earth to greatness, by showing that even a loud, hammy,
trashy, and generally obnoxious in every way person can become a star with a
little luck and grunt work. But Susann/Midler is so gratingly awful, not only
when it comes to talent, but also as a person, it's impossible to relate to the
character.
Oh, and this is a comedy. You might think a comedy would really blow if the
lead is dying of cancer. Oh, and how it blows. I smiled maybe once during
this film, and what with jokes like "Table for three: two adults and one
Gentile," how can you blame me? Everything from the opening credits to Burt
Bacharach's tinny score is just plain bad. That said, I was stunned to hear
the laughter of our baby boomer-heavy audience throughout this film.
Maybe it worked for them, but boy did it fail for me. Frankly I would have
preferred to go beyond The Valley of the Dolls.
Isn't she loud?
Reviewer: Christopher Null





