Zelig Movie Review
Zelig Review
"Zelig" Overview

Rating: PG
1983
Cast and Crew
Director : Woody AllenProducer : Robert Greenhut
Screenwiter : Woody Allen
Starring : Woody Allen,Mia Farrow
Woody Allen is in top form, while taking a substantially different track than
his kooky comedy M.O.
Zelig is presented as a documentary detailing the life of one Leonard Zelig
(Allen), a 1920s cause celebre who has the unique power of automatically
changing his appearance to look like those around him. Black, Indian, obese,
Chinese, Scottish -- you name it, Zelig becomes it.
The notion is absurd, of course, and the consternation this "human chameleon"
causes to the medical community and America at large is dazzlingly comic. One
diagnosis he is given by a doctor: "I'm sure it's something he picked up from
eating Mexican food." A "chameleon" dance craze is launched. Zelig songs are
written, including "You May Be Six People But I Love You."
The film is full of deadpan hilarity, as narrated by the ever-serious Patrick
Horgan, never hinting for a moment that we should take Zelig's story any way
other than deadly serious. Horgan's delivery of information, such as the sole
advice Zelig's father gave him on his deathbed ("Save string."), is absolutely
perfect, as if we're being treated to Citizen Kane.
Allen does the mockumentary right. The present day is shot as interviews with
real people playing themselves, only remembering a false past. The archival
footage is either real or made to look like it's old -- or notably with Allen
inserted into historical footage, batting in the Yankees lineup after Babe Ruth
or meeting with presidents. It's worth noting that Woody did this 11 years
before Forrest Gump earned kudos for the exact same trick.
Zelig is far better than the mockumentary Allen would produce decades later,
Sweet and Lowdown, which doesn't make even a half-hearted effort to be
realistic or funny. It's imperfect -- notably the relationship between Zelig
and his psychiatrist (Mia Farrow), but that's almost beside the point. Zelig
is absurd and fascinating at the same time.
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Review by Christopher Null
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