Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Playing-Pleasantville-Daniels
Full Text:
NOW PLAYING: Brilliant Enigma Is "Pleasantville"
By Trey Paul Alexander III
Could Ward and June Cleaver really have been happy? Wasn't their white picket
fence world just a tad too perfect? What was the deal with their sleeping in
two separate beds? They may have thought they were happy, but they couldn't
truly have known bliss. At the very least, they were vastly unenlightened
about "the real world."
That's the point of view taken by Pleasantville , a moral fable from the man
who wrote Big and Dave. George and Betty Parker (William H. Macy and Joan
Allen) are the parents in a '50s TV show, "Pleasantville," the favorite
program of outcast teen David (Tobey Maguire). When David gets into a war of
the clicker with his twin sister, Jennifer (Reese Witherspoon), the battling
siblings wreck the TV remote control. Enter an odd repairman (Don Knotts) who
hooks them up with a new, heavy-duty remote that not only powers the
television, but thrusts the two into the fictional world of Pleasantville.
Once in the literally black-and-white world of Pleasantville, David and
Jennifer take on the roles of Bud and Mary Sue, the squeaky-clean offspring of
George and Betty Parker. David, though puzzled by their predicament, finds
comfort in the scripted, familiar world of Pleasantville, but Jennifer wants
out. Yet once she gets a gaze at Mary Sue's dreamboat boyfriend, her desire to
leave is quelled.
A problem arises when Jennifer veers from the script and introduces her steady
to more than holding hands. After the intimate experience, things at
Pleasantville start to change, including the plot lines and color schemes.
Subtle, yet dramatic changes -- the wet petals of a rose spring to bold,
crimson life -- begin to unfold. The introduction of sex transforms the
citizens: teens spend inordinate amounts of time at Lovers Lane; Betty feels
unfulfilled and makes advances towards the soda shop owner (Jeff Daniels), who
is feeling unrealized and pursues ambitions to be a painter; and library books
which had been filled with empty pages are now bursting with words.
While the progressive citizens of Pleasantville experiment and explore -- thus
bringing many into sheer technicolor brilliance -- their monochromatic
counterparts, including the mayor (the late J.T. Walsh) balk at these changes
and begin slandering the "coloreds."
Pleasantville is well acted and, visually, brilliantly conceived, but rather
heavy-handed on the symbolism. The latter half of the film casts the liberal
residents as minorities, going so far as to have storefront signs that read,
"no coloreds allowed." Then the point is hammered home during a courtroom
sequence in which all the full-colored people sit in the balcony a la To Kill
a Mockingbird and its depiction of the treatment of blacks in Smalltown, USA.
This also brings home the film's other flaw: It struggles with the coherency
of its allegorical side. It's one thing if the film was meant as a metaphor
for race relations, but it seems mainly concerned with the idea that
traditional, Biblical values -- or our idyllic view of a society governed by
them -- are inadequate to deal with a society racked by drugs, broken
families, sexually transmitted diseases, etc.
At one point, there's even a Garden of Eden metaphor that casts David and
Jennifer as the serpents who will wrest these people from their faux utopia
and into reality. Yet the movie, ambivalent towards Biblical values, also
ignores why the best-selling book of all time is conspicuously absent during
the literary explosion of Pleasantville. This inconsistency of ideas and the
film's ultimately nihilistic worldview continue to mount until a very
ambiguous, puzzling ending.
Pleasantville is rated PG-13 for profanity and sexual suggestiveness. Though
technically proficient and occasionally funny, it fails to hit its marks
nearly as well as another recent film in the same vein, The Truman Show.