The Hoax Movie Review
The Hoax Review

"The Hoax" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Lasse HallströmProducer : Betsy Beers,Mark Gordon,Leslie Holleran,Joshua D. Maurer,Bob Yari
Screenwiter : William Wheeler
Starring : Richard Gere,Alfred Molina,Hope Davis,Marcia Gay Harden,Stanley Tucci,Julie Delpy,Eli Wallach,John Carter,Christopher Evan Welch,Zeljko Ivanek,David Aaron Baker,Peter McRobbie,John Bedford Lloyd
Everybody loves a good con artist, a guy who can bluff his way into or out of
anything. He's isn't violent, not a gangster, but a smooth-talking charmer
whose poker face doesn't flinch no matter how dangerous or delicate the
situation gets. Lasse Hallström's latest, The Hoax, offers a portrait of such a
con artist, a real-life fabulist who makes James Frey (the disgraced
"non-fiction" writer behind 2003's A Million Little Pieces) and his shenanigans
look like chump change.
Richard Gere, perfectly cast, plays Clifford Irving, a down-and-out writer who
in 1971 wrote (and nearly got published) a fake biography of Howard Hughes.
Desperate to jump-start his career, Irving duped his editor Andrea Tate (Hope
Davis) and the top dogs at McGraw-Hill into believing he was not only a friend
of Hughes, the notorious recluse, but that the billionaire had tapped Irving to
write his life story. Smelling a publishing sensation, McGraw-Hill offered
Irving a then-record publishing deal, and the writer suddenly found himself the
crown prince of the publishing world.
Working from William Wheeler's adaptation of Irving's own memoirs, Hallström
keeps a generally light touch over the material. This is good news for Gere and
Alfred Molina, who plays fellow writer and reluctant partner-in-crime Dick
Suskind. Irving and Suskind make for a pair of bumbling sleuths, and, as played
by Gere and Molina, there's a nervous and unexpected comic energy between them.
Chief among The Hoax's small but lively amusements is watching Irving and
Suskind slip out of one mess and into another. Irving even fools handwriting
experts and Hughes associates with forged letters, faked tape interviews in
which he affects Hughes' vocal patterns, and fabricates entire conversations
with Hughes, off-the-cuff, to appease his publisher's suspicions. It's only
when word of Irving's ploy leaks to the media that the question of his veracity
is taken to task until Hughes himself, emerging from a shroud of secrecy, blows
the whistle on Irving in a bizarre televised conference call with politicos.
Suskind, the morally aggrieved of the two, protests against going through with
their scheme at every turn. But Irving's snake-oil charm wins him over. It's
the same charm that keeps Irving's marriage to Edith (Marcia Gay Harden) glued
together. With convincing shows of remorse and devotion, Irving overrides
Edith's displeasure of his ongoing affair with Nina (Julie Delpy), a would-be
actress. Wheeler interweaves Irving's professional conniving with his domestic
ones -- their fortunes rising and falling in sync, one affecting the other in
an efficient, albeit predictable, strategy for tracing the man's rise-and-fall
narrative arc.
Gere capably conveys just enough of Irving's inner panic, roiling beneath the
surface of sly grins and heady boasts, to get us to sympathize with, and, yes,
even root for him as the stakes rise higher and higher. In examining the mind
of a capitol liar, The Hoax succeeds in depicting how all lies -- and, thereby,
all fiction -- is a marriage of the imagination and of real life; by
re-contextualizing events into a fictional setup and interchanging their order,
Irving invents his fanciful lies. It's a truthful observation about how truths
are twisted to fit one's strategic needs. Hallström also nicely evokes the
period, in all its polyestered and frizzy haired glory, and takes amusing digs
at the gathering storm of political scandal enveloping Irving's America.
As a stylist, however, Hallström's never been much to shout about, especially
with his recent films, and such is the case with The Hoax. As the story's
temperature rises, we crave for Hallström's style -- some gesture from the
camera or editing -- to jolt itself awake, a snap of subversion or wickedness
equal to Irving's own high-wire stunt work. When Irving sinks deeper into his
own delusional cauldron, believing in his own paranoia about Hughes' agents
tailing him, it whiffs of dramatic contrivance, derivative of similar material
like Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. Wheeler and Hallström's attempts to steer
towards "darker" territory fall flat and long-winded. Still, as a well-behaved
caper comedy featuring standout performances from Gere and Molina, The Hoax
pulls a good con, and we play along, delightedly.
You wanna hear a good hoax? OK, there's this guy and a gerbil...
Reviewer: Jay Antani





