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He Took a Village

In the role of New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell--source and subject alike of Joe Gould's Secret--Stanley Tucci adopts the hesitant drawl of a displaced Southern aristocrat, who goe

Stuart Klawans

April 5, 2000

In the role of New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell–source and subject alike of Joe Gould’s Secret–Stanley Tucci adopts the hesitant drawl of a displaced Southern aristocrat, who goes through the New York City of the early forties wearing his politeness like a second raincoat and hat. He needs the protection.

To his editor, Harold Ross, he speaks in apologetic stammers, even when receiving a compliment. (“Thank God you don’t write the way you talk,” Ross grumbles.) Before a daughter who is no more than 9, he visibly recoils when told that Daddy’s new story sounds boring. That’s how vulnerable Tucci’s Mitchell can seem, even among friends and family–let alone while plunging into the Village’s lowest bars, sifting through rubble-strewn pits or eyeing strangers in the subway. Sleek and long-faced, Tucci carries himself down to all these places with a slightly stiff modesty and emerges with equal decorum, having undergone little visible alteration.

As producer and director of Joe Gould’s Secret, Tucci behaves with similar reticence. His movie is as withdrawn, as quizzical–I’m tempted to say as inert–as its point-of-view character. All the film’s energy has gone into the character who is Mitchell’s chief object of study, the well-educated and grandiloquent Village bum Joe Gould: cadger of meals, drinks and dollars, stray pet of artists and poets, author of a purported million-word Oral History of Our Time. Here, at the opposite pole from Mitchell, is a man so exhibitionistic that Alice Neel gives him three penises when she paints his nude portrait, feeling “He didn’t seem to have enough.” A living tourist attraction, Gould makes a pittance by displaying himself to Village sightseers, who would be disappointed if they didn’t get to meet a Bohemian. He’s just as willing to gratify a more sophisticated audience, The New Yorker‘s readers, to whose amused curiosity Mitchell delivers him in a wrapping of glossy paper.

The movie’s energy goes into Gould, and in him it goes bad. As played by Ian Holm, he’s the squat, dirt-darkened shadow of Joe Mitchell: hat comically battered, coat and all other surfaces ragged, beard overgrown in the time-honored style of the Cynic (though no previous Diogenes has been in the habit of dumping an entire bottle of ketchup into his soup). To Mitchell’s embarrassment, this shadow won’t disappear, once the New Yorker profile is published. Gould continues to cling to him, growing more rather than less desperate in his needs. It’s as if he’s become a weight that Mitchell has to drag along; and the movie drags with him, until we finally see what Mitchell can be when he lets the good manners slip.

For an actor of Ian Holm’s boundless skill, the character of Joe Gould might be almost too easy. Lesser performers have been known to shuffle along and mumble at one moment, throw back the head in a Shakespearean roar the next and at the end voice a few lines of pathetic self-knowledge, with eyes misty but sharp and fingers atremble. That said, if you’ve watched other impersonations of the cracked Diogenes, you will be grateful to Holm. He does not charm; he refuses to twinkle. His Gould is perhaps least vital at precisely those moments when he’s being the life of the party–forcing the randy-old-goat routine, misplaying the classic wild-dance-on-a-table. Unlike, say, Alec Guinness’s Gully Jimson in The Horse’s Mouth, Holm’s Gould has to strain to be a rascal–to do anything, it seems–as if the strange inertia hanging over the movie had its center in his heart.

As Mitchell remarks in voiceover, “It was not the only thing we had in common.”

Tucci’s direction, from a script by Howard Rodman, relies more than a little on this sense of slowed or stopped time. The first shots come from archival footage of New York City, given a postcard tint and periodically arrested, so that actors in the passing scene don’t pass. From there, the film opens into Maryse Alberti’s softly focused, delicately colored cinematography. The overall impression is of a nostalgic glow, at odds with a time period and theme that might have called for black-and-white. Here, too, pauses are embedded. The people who cross Mitchell’s path have a way of posing, as if allowing him to take their portraits; and his wife, Therese (Hope Davis), is a photographer, whose black-and-white street scenes, analogues to her husband’s stories, are incorporated into the narrative.

Why, then, does Joe Gould’s Secret give off such a mellow aura? I think the reason has to do with the conviviality that was so prominent in Tucci’s previous films, Big Night and The Impostors. The film is most impressive not for Holm’s showy performance or Tucci’s inward one–as fine as they are–but for the evocation of a Village community that looked after Gould, willingly if not perfectly. In that sense, the soul of the film belongs with Alice Neel (Susan Sarandon, looking beautifully at ease), art dealer Vivian Marquie (the radiantly intelligent Patricia Clarkson) and such incidental characters as Village Vanguard proprietors Max and Sadie Gordon (David Wohl and Julie Halston).

The troubled dialectic between writer and subject–exploiter and exhibitionist–seems less important, by the film’s end, than the mere fact of help offered. Joe Gould’s Secret glows with nostalgia for a city that sustained its weirdos. Sixty years from now, who will be able to make such a film about our cities?

Somewhere there lives a boy who wants to grow up and join the bus-and-truck tour of Jesus Christ Superstar. For that child, DreamWorks has made the animated feature The Road to El Dorado.

Here’s Miguel (voice of Kenneth Branagh), shoulder-length blond hair parted in the middle, reddish beard trimmed neatly at all times, sashaying into the South American jungle in a flowing outfit cut from the same fabric as the soundtrack’s Elton John songs. Is this 1519, as a title proclaims, or 1973? If market research says that kiddie-film ticket-buyers are mostly parents who are pushing 40, then you know the answer. It’s time to pump up the pop-rock and tell the animators to draw flared pants–the kind that are favored by Tulio (voice of Kevin Kline), Miguel’s bosom companion, who pulls his dark hair back in a ponytail and wears a little vest, as if he worked in a Buffalo Springfield cover band.

The story, copied in equal measure from Hope-Crosby Road movies and The Man Who Would Be King, goes like this: Miguel and Tulio, a couple of scuffling showbiz types (I mean, lovable Spanish rapscallions) come into possession of a cryptic map to the City of Gold, El Dorado. Soon after, they stumble into the hold of a ship full of conquistadors bound for the New World. A brisk shipwreck later, Miguel and Tulio wash up in a place of dense jungle and visual mélange, composed of Olmec, Maya, Aztec and Disney elements. Sure enough, our boys have found El Dorado. Now they can be greeted as gods (in the time-honored fashion of white-men-meet-the-natives movies), introduce democracy to Mesoamerica and bicker over the affections of Chel (voice of Rosie Perez), the cartoon babe in the Dorothy Lamour role.

Directed by Eric “Bibo” Bergeron and Don Paul, The Road to El Dorado creates characters with the unmodeled, flat-plane features that uglify so much of digital animation. As if to force expression into these figures, the filmmakers have overcompensated by outfitting Miguel and Tulio with broad white bands in their mouths–digital-animation dentures, you might say–which are to be flashed at all times. Only the villain, the priest-sorcerer Tzekel-Kan (voice of Armand Assante), has individual teeth, a trait that makes him the film’s most human-seeming figure, even when done up in his jaguar-mask outfit.

If you are a pushing-40 parent who buys tickets to kiddie films, you may take your charges to The Road to El Dorado in full confidence that they will come away disapproving of human sacrifice. At least the early seventies taught us that much.

Stuart KlawansStuart Klawans was the film critic for The Nation from 1988 through 2020


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