Affleck Insurance

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Surviving
Affleck.
by
Jon Dunmore © 28 May 2006.
There
is one great moment in Surviving Christmas that almost
makes it worth the pain: James Gandolfini cracks a shovel
over Ben Affleck's stupid head.
This
movie serves as yet another unfortunate example of James
Gandolfini proving what a great actor he is whilst simultaneously
besmirching his career by acting in this film.
Young
and wealthy ad exec, Drew Latham (Ben Affleck), has been
inculcated into believing that one must never be alone on
Christmas. (And there, from the outset, is the underlying
problem with our suspension of disbelief in this idiotic
movie: how many people of Drew's social standing, in 2004,
truly care one way or another whether Christmas is spent
alone or with a surrogate family or with a fifty-dollar
prostitute?)
Drew buys off a family to spend Christmas with, on the condition
that they pretend to be his own, insensately ignoring all
the indications to the contrary that his money has not bought
the emotions he was seeking.
For
$250,000, a surly suburban truck driver, Tom Valco (James
Gandolfini), and his disheveled wife, Christine (Catherine
O'Hara), agree to be Drew's ad hoc family, against
protests from their son, Brian (a very one-dimensional Josh
Zuckerman) and daughter, Alicia (a very soft-focused Christina
Applegate). Drew then spends the rest of the movie supposedly
recapturing his youth or - something. The messages in this
movie are as twisted and illogical as its dry-mouthed storyline.
Fraught with overt psychoses, Drew plasters a fake smile
on his face and blindly remains in denial against every
denigration that he was supposedly buying the Valco family
to avoid.
Which
begs the question: If Drew is paying these people to recapture
some semblance of joyous familial emotion, how psychotic
must he be to pretend happiness amongst their barbs and
mental anguish over his presence? It is not a case of the
Valco family hiding their true feelings and pretending to
be happy while around Drew - three of the four members make
it patently clear they despise him. Is he so incognizant
that he cannot see that his money is not buying him the
"family" atmosphere he was inculcated into believing
was a truth in the first place?
As
with all movies this opprobrious, one wonders how four
screenwriters could possibly get so tangled in their own
narcissistic dreams of appearing in a credits sequence that
they will overlook any semblance of plausibility, or intelligence.
Director
Mike Mitchell, who was responsible for Deuce Bigalow:
Male Gigolo - stop right there. 'Nuff said.
Gandolfini
and O'Hara somehow manage to shine, proving their mettle
amongst this mess. Christina Applegate is willowy and cutesy
and blond and fiery in all the right places, scathingly
cutting Drew into little strips of carcass for most of the
movie, then doing an about-face and falling in love with
him because the script tells her to.
And
I wouldn't go so far as to say that Affleck is a bad actor,
but Rob Schneider better look over his shoulder. There's
a whole new level of Desperately Seeking Talent in town.
END
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