Date: Fri 10-Sep-1999
Date: Fri 10-Sep-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Hugh-Grant-Caan-Tripplehorn
Full Text:
NOW PLAYING : A Little Worn-Out In Plot, But "Mickey Blue Eyes" Is Still Fun
By Trey Paul Alexander III
Hugh Grant, the fumbling Englishman who climbed the hill of stardom with Four
Weddings and a Funeral but came down a mountain of bad press regarding Divine
Brown, is riding high again after the success of Notting Hill , his film with
Julia Roberts from earlier this summer. But will audiences accept the often
bumbling leading man as a self-assured, "made guy"? Fuhgeddaboutit! Turning
the disarmingly charming Grant into a wiseguy would be about as convincing as
digitally inserting Jar Jar Binks into the role. But ask Grant to play a
fish-out-of-water tale in which he is a mild-mannered Brit in New York who
unwittingly gets "connected," then you might have something. Capiche?
Mickey Blue Eyes wants to make audiences an offer they can't refuse by casting
Grant as Michael Felgate, an auctioneer who finds he may become married to the
mob when his fiancee, Gina (Jeanne Tripplehorn), reveals that her father
(James Caan) is a "goodfella." Gina, concerned that the rest of the "family"
might corrupt her sensitive suitor, tries to rebuff Michael's proposals, but
he'll have none of that. Instead, he gets her to agree to help him make his
way through relations with the family, making sure no little "favors" are
asked or given, and keeping Michael out of situations that will have him
sleeping with the fishes.
On the originality scale, Mickey Blue Eyes rates about as high as some of the
worn-out cliches I've already trotted out this week. That's not to say this
comedy flick is completely ineffective, but it has an unusually steep, uphill
battle to wage, especially considering this year alone has already brought us
similarly themed works in Analyze This and HBO's The Sopranos.
As directed by Kelly Makin, Mickey Blue Eyes is curiously spotty, letting some
potentially winning moments go by too fast and letting other, less effective
bits linger much too long. As the manager of a small auction house, Michael
gets quite a few good laughs in his natural environment, especially once he is
forced to start unloading some dreadful paintings by one of his future
relatives. Especially funny, though a bit arbitrary, is a sequence involving
an elderly lady who decides she wants to get in on the world of art
collecting. Grant is quite clever in this prolonged bit as he tries to keep
her from buying one of these psychotic works.
Also effective are Grant's scenes with Caan, who could play this role in his
sleep, but thankfully puts much more energy than that into his performance.
However, their pairing is also one of the more disappointing aspects to the
film: they don't have enough scenes together. Grant doesn't get into his
Mickey Blue Eyes persona -- he sounds almost like a hilariously inept
combination of James Cagney and Edward G. Robinson -- until more than halfway
into the picture, and even then, it lasts for but two, albeit quite hilarious,
short sequences. It's almost as if the producers, which include Grant and
girlfriend Elizabeth Hurley, were concerned about milking this angle of the
film. Instead of becoming a one-note sketch, Mickey Blue Eyes cuts itself
short by not remaining with Grant and Caan's comic pair. The film seems to
hastily move on to the next plot point, which all too predictably brings in
the FBI.
Grant and company certainly offer up some entertaining moments, but the film
could have used a bit more focus and a few less tangents. This is one of those
rare cases where a Hollywood romantic comedy could have used less peripheral
elements and more of its stars just doing what they do best.
Mickey Blue Eyes is rated PG-13 for brief violence and occasional profanity.