Pipe Dream Movie Review
Pipe Dream Review
"Pipe Dream" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : John WalshProducer : Mike Curb,Carole Curb Nemoy,Sally Roy
Screenwiter : Cynthia Kaplan,John Walsh
Starring : Martin Donovan,Mary-Louise Parker,Rebecca Gayheart,Kevin Carroll,Peter Jacobson,Guinevere Turner,Jill Hennessy,Anthony Arkin
Somewhere between Living in Oblivion and Cyrano de Bergerac lies Pipe Dream,
John Walsh's quirky and endearing little comedy about love, the movies, and
plumbing.
Martin Donovan stars as David, an everyday plumber who longs for the torrid
love affairs that come with being a movie director. With the help of friend RJ
(Kevin Carroll) and a script stolen from client/neighbor Toni (Mary-Louise
Parker), David reinvents himself as "David Coppelberg," using Toni's script to
stage a casting call and meet endless eligible ladies. But the movie, of
course, takes on a life of its own, and soon enough David finds himself in the
director's chair, with Toni (who's forgiven him for the theft) coaching him
from the back seat.
Pipe Dream provides solid laughs and a satisfying romantic entanglement thanks
to witty writing and two appropriately deadpan leads. I've always enjoyed
Donovan and Parker's work, and they are genuinely fun here, especially
Donovan's hang-dog portrayal of a man who decides to take matters into his own
hands and quickly becomes a victim of circumstance as things spiral far out of
control. Walsh's insight into the way movies really get made is dead on. I
didn't quite feel the chemistry between Donovan and Parker that there ought to
have been, and Rebecca Gayheart -- as the third leg of the love triangle --
doesn't add much beyond her usual ditz persona.
Still, there's something about Pipe Dream that is strangely fun and genuinely
funny. I don't know why, but the way Donovan says "I like E.T." made me crack
up so much I had to run it back and watch it three times. The plot machinations
are surprising without being contrived, and the ending is satisfying without
being perfunctory.
The DVD includes a commentary track from Walsh and co-writer Cynthia Kaplan,
and a behind-the-scenes vignette that is precisely what it says: Raw footage
captured during the shooting of the final scene of the film. Probably of
interest only if you've never seen a movie being made before.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



