Paparazzi Movie Review
Paparazzi Review

"Paparazzi" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul AbascalProducer : Mel Gibson,Bruce Davey,Stephen McEveety
Screenwiter : Forrest Smith
Starring : Cole Hauser,Tom Sizemore,Robin Tunney,Dennis Farina,Daniel Baldwin
ATTENTION ASPIRING FILMMAKERS!!
Forget what those how-to screenplay books advise. The key to getting a
screenplay sold is to find a pet peeve of Hollywood celebrities, and write a
script where they get revenge on those behind the annoyance. A movie like this
is now playing at a theater near us. Paparazzi tells the story of an up and
coming actor (Cole Hauser) whose life is disrupted when some pesky shutterbugs
won’t leave him alone, nearly killing his wife and kid. So, naturally, the star
starts killing the photographers.
As awful as it is, Paparazzi should give us hope. Look how many ideas there are
for scripts! How about a thriller where a starlet (maybe Kate Bosworth) can
never find fat free ranch dressing at the craft services table, so she plots
revenge against the maniacal catering service who always serves her the dreaded
regular ranch. Or how about this: an independent film star who can never find
the perfect faded, retro T-shirt at the trendy Brooklyn boutique, loses his
cool and starts busting skulls. One of the guys from Y Tu Mama Tambien can star.
Oh, the possibilities are limitless! Living the lives they do, celebrities face
constant inconveniences and hassles. And they need to be heard, right now! We
just have to avoid the mistakes director Paul Abascal and screenwriter Forrest
Smith -- working from an idea by producer Mel Gibson -- made with Paparazzi. By
following a simple set of rules, it’ll be a matter of time before one of us
makes the celebrity version of American Splendor. Only Paul Giamatti and Hope
Davis will be nowhere near it. Well, unless Davis dumps the Joyce Carol Oates
look.
Here’s what we need to do:
Get a better lead actor. Hauser has been acting for years, but recently in 2
Fast 2 Furious and in Paparazzi he’s been doing this solemn, aggravated style
that doesn’t exactly elicit sympathy, an important matter when your character
is killing people with the ease of flicking a light switch. When your hero is
creepier than the bad guys, that’s not a good sign.
We’ll try to explain the motives behind what the tormentor does. In Paparazzi,
Abascal and Smith only see black and white. The audience never gets an idea of
what motivates these people to live these lives. Is it an adrenaline rush? Is
it the money? Is it the perk of wearing whatever you want all of the time?
Since the movie features a no-dimensional hero and several one-dimensional
villains, there’s no incentive to watch. Justified, multi-layered hatred makes
every conflict better. That’s why sports reporters can’t stop talking about the
Red Sox and Yankees, but rarely pay heed to any other baseball
rivalry.
Dennis Farina, Robin Tunney, and Tom Sizemore are excused, because they are
good actors whom we should respect by not offering our project. They shouldn’t
have to revisit the past. Speaking of the past was it really six years ago that
Sizemore and Farina were in Saving Private Ryan? Could it be that five years
ago Tunney was looking to jumpstart her career with End of Days?
Wow.
Gone will be the clichés: a cute little kid to get those tears going,
gratuitous celebrity cameos, a pointless and redundant introductory voice over,
shots of our hero sitting in empty rooms pondering what went wrong, jogging on
the beach, riding a convertible along the Pacific coastline, and the
investigating cop who knows more than he’s letting on.
Our lead character will have a better name than Bo Laramie. Is he in porn? In
the 1970s?
Now, the next step is to befriend a celebrity. Abascal was Gibson’s barber, and
look where it got him. So, scour the Los Angeles newspapers, talk to your
friends. Surely, Tara Reid needs a dog walker. I can’t imagine that Paul Walker
waxes his own surfboards. If you’re not in Los Angeles, try New York. I once
saw Julianne Moore pushing her kid in a stroller. Maybe she needs a nanny.
Hollywood success has never been closer to us, friends. Just remember to bring
a pooper scooper and shoes you don’t care about.
Watching this anyway on DVD? Director's commentary, deleted scenes, and a
couple of featurettes extend the suffering.
How about a trim, Robin?
Reviewer: Pete Croatto



