The Life and Death of Peter Sellers Movie Review
The Life and Death of Peter Sellers Review
"The Life and Death of Peter Sellers" Overview

Rating: NR
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Stephen HopkinsProducer : Simon Bosanquet
Screenwiter : Christopher Markus,Stephen McFeely
Starring : Geoffrey Rush,Charlize Theron,Emily Watson,John Lithgow,Miriam Margolyes,Peter Vaughan,Sonia Aquino,Stanley Tucci,Stephen Fry
Discussion topic: Which of the following people can accurately be described as
"comic geniuses"? Woody Allen. Adam Sandler. Groucho Marx. Gilda Radner.
You're unlikely to get consensus on such a phrase, except for one: Peter
Sellers. Everybody knows he was a genius, right?
Sellers was in fact an immensely successful movie star, but his elusive
adaptability made him truly great. He achieved box office viability in the
United States with the broadest possible physical comedy (the Pink Panther
series), but also garnered a powerful artistic legacy from his star turns in
seriocomic masterpieces (Dr. Strangelove and Being There). Sellers
differentiator was that, unlike, say, Allen or Sandler, he was a uniquely
talented actor. But he was also apparently plenty of other things to the people
around him, none of which garnered acclaim.
In The Life and Death of Peter Sellers, based on Roger Lewis' biography of the
man, director Stephen Hopkins and star Geoffrey Rush take on the challenge of
creating an emotionally engaging biopic of man who was, of his own admission,
an empty vessel. Indeed, this Sellers is so obsessed with his own vacant self,
so star struck, that he can only relate to other humans by using and discarding
them.
Rush's Sellers lies to his wives, emotionally savages his children, deludes
himself about his relationships with co-stars and partners, and basically acts
like a spoiled jackass in his push for fame and fortune. Egged on by his
coddling and Machiavellian mother (Margolyes), Sellers botches stardom badly,
leaving a polluted wake of disgust and loathing. But no one loathes Sellers
quite like himself, and his famous method acting only enabled him to avoid
himself for a few weeks of filming.
In an unusual dramatic twist, Rush performs monologues as other characters in
Sellers' life in order to illustrate the extremity of the man's ego. Overall,
however, Hopkins maintains an air of ambiguity about Sellers' psyche, which
occasionally reduces the film to emotional snuff, nothing more than a parade of
unabated personal destruction. Sellers' borderline humanity created a
tortuously unhappy life, and the gloominess of this cinematic version contrasts
jarringly with the vibrancy of Sellers' work.
The Life and Death of Peter Sellers is worth a viewing if only for Rush's
plotting and violent outbursts, but be warned: Next time you catch a Pink
Panther flick on cable, you might find yourself rooting for Cato.
Reviewer: Eric Meyerson





