True Romance - Roger Ebert Review: 3 stars out of 4
There are few objections to
TRUE ROMANCE that I haven't thought of, and I dismiss them all
with a wave of the hand. This is the kind of movie that creates
its own universe, and glories in it. The universe in question
could best be located inside the inflamed fantasies of an
adolescent male mindand not any adolescent, but the kind of
teenage boy who goes to martial arts movies and fantasizes about
guns and girls with great big garbanzos. It is the kind of film
that will make the best 10 lists of such supporters of the
decline of civilization as Joe Bob Briggs.
And yet that doesn't make it bad. I've always tried to adopt a
generic approach to the movies, judging each film in terms of its
type and the expectations we have for it. And TRUE ROMANCE, which
feels at times like a fire sale down at the clich? factory, is
made with such energy, such high spirits, such an enchanting
goofiness, that it's impossible to resist. Check your brains at
the door.
The movie's hero,
named Clarence, played by Christian Slater, is perhaps something
like the target audience member for the movie. He works in a
comic book store, spends his free time watching kung fu triple-features,
and can hardly believe it when a blonde in a low-cut garbanzo-flaunter
walks into his life.
Her name is Alabama (uh, huh) and she's played by Patricia
Arquette. I guess it goes without saying that she's a hooker;
that's the only profession available to the women in a movie like
this, and is sort of convenient, because it means she doesn't
have any regular hours, no parents, and is available, at least
for a price. Of course, such hookers, in such movies, never
charge the hero anything; Clarence exudes a magnetic appeal that
transcends commerce, I guess, like when Billy Idol dropped in
over at Heidi's house.
Alabama is actually a bit of an innocent. She's only been a hooker for four days (or four clients, I forget), but that has been long enough for her to pick up a vicious pimp (Gary Oldman), whom Clarence has to deal with. Clarence is courageous and stupid, two invaluable assets in this situation, and eliminates the pimp in a prelude to a cross-country odyssey, after, in a series of tortured plot manipulations, he and Alabama have come into possession of $5 million of the mob's cocaine, which they plan to sell at a discount, before flying to Rio.
TRUE ROMANCE was
directed by Tony Scott, whose movies like TOP GUN and DAYS OF
THUNDER show an affection for boys and their toys. But the film's
real author, his stamp on every line of every scene, is Quentin
Tarantino. As in RESERVOIR DOGS, his 1992 directorial debut,
Tarantino creates a world of tough guys, bravado, wild
exaggeration, lurid melodrama, easy women, betrayal, guns and
drugs. In his world, "low cut" is to "neckline"
as "fast" is to "car."
The movie hurtles from scene to scene, aiming for a climax that
will strike RESERVOIR DOGS fans as curiously familiar. In both
films, the plot ingeniously arrives at a moment where all of the
warring parties are in the same room at the same time,
simultaneously shooting at each other.
There isn't a
moment of TRUE ROMANCE that stands up under much thought, and yet
the energy and style of the movie are exhilarating. Christian
Slater has the kind of cocky recklessness the movie needs, and
Patricia Arquette portrays a fetching combination of bimbo and
best pal. The supporting cast is superb, a roll call of actors at
home in these violent waters: Christopher Walken, Dennis Hopper
and Brad Pitt, for example.
And then there is Val Kilmer, fresh from THE DOORS, playing yet
another dead rock hero. He lurks in the background of several
scenes, as a muse who visits Christian Slater from time to time,
dispensing heartfelt advice. Would you be surprised if I revealed
that this figure is, in fact, the ghost of Elvis Presley? You
would not? You will find yourself right at home here.
Created by Alexandra Haviara - Online since 22nd October, 1999
Page updated: 1st December