Pittsburgh Movie Review
Pittsburgh Review
"Pittsburgh" Overview

Rating: NR
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Chris Bradley,Kyle LaBracheProducer : Patrick Bradley,Bernard Cahill,Jeff Goldblum,Ryan Magnussen
Screenwiter :
Starring : Ed Begley Jr.,Rachelle Carson,Illeana Douglas,Jeff Goldblum,Craig Kilborn,Moby,Alanis Morissette,Conan O'Brien
Singularly unique, Pittsburgh is one of the more enjoyable motion pictures I've
come across in recent months. Apparently dumped to DVD (with a preview on Starz
Cinema) without a theatrical run, the film is part documentary, part
mockumentary, part improv comedy. The film has no screenwriting credit, but it
does tell a story of sorts, involving Jeff Goldblum (as himself, as is everyone
here) returning to his hometown of Pittsburgh for a two-week run of The Music
Man, in which he will play the lead. This amuses, excites, and perplexes
various people in his life.
Goldblum did indeed star in The Music Man in Pittsburgh, and he did go on late
night TV with Conan and Kilborn to promote it. I presume he really is friends
with Illieana Douglas and Ed Begley Jr., but I'm less clear if he's really
wooing a girl in need of a green card and whether Moby's obsessed with amateur
porn. Pittsburgh lives in a relatively thick line between reality and fantasy,
but it never ceases to be funny.
The film is structured in tightly-edited snippets, so much so that when I first
started watching it I thought it might be a preview for the full feature
instead of the actual movie. After some initial disorientation, this works.
It's kind of like watching YouTube.
That probably has a lot to do with the film being so exceptionally funny.
Begley spends most of his screen time working to get Goldblum to endorse his
portable solar generator, while Goldblum's agent, never seen on camera, phones
constantly to try to get him to sign on to a Michael Bay project on cloning, a
"really hot topic right now," and give up the stage show bit. Some of the
tidbits don't work; too much of the film is driven by chance encounters with
other celebrities who don't add much to the production, as they obviously don't
have the deep improv skills of some of the other actors here. But again the
structure works to Pittsburgh's advantage: It's just a few minutes before we're
on to something new.
Quirky to a fault, this is definitely a DVD worthy of a Saturday night rental.
Extras include substantial deleted scenes, with commentary.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





