Sunday 18 June 2017

Fathers' Day


1997’s “Fathers’ Day”, directed by Ivan Reitman.
Starring Billy Crystal, Robin Williams, Bruce Greenwood, Natassja Kinski, Julia Louis Dreyfuss, and Charlie Hofheimer.
In “FD”, Billy Crystal plays a twice divorced lawyer (now married to Dreyfuss), approached by an old flame (Kinski) who tells him that her teenage son is missing after a fight with her partner (Greenwood). The catch? Crystal’s the father. Crystal then hits the road to find the son he’s never met before, prepared only with a photograph. We then meet the Robin Williams character, playing a manic depressive writer who’s attempt to commit suicide is interrupted by Kinski’s reaching out to him. She also tells Williams that he is the father, and Williams strikes out on the road as well. It doesn’t take long for Crystal and Williams to connect along the way, and figure out their predicament. The manic depressive Williams is inspired by the life affirming news (even if it’s not true), and Crystal comes along, either by curiosity or contractual necessity. Further complicating matters, Greenwood also hits the road in search of his step son.
Filmed in 1997, the film feels at least a decade dated, both in concept and it’s fading stars’ charisma (and mulleted hair). While it may at times resemble a hackneyed version of 1988’s superior “Midnight Run”, it’s closer in spirit to “Plan 9 from Outer Space” and “Weekend at Bernie’s”. The only thing about the film that does feel relevant for it’s respective time, is the awkward corporate synergy between the movie’s characters and the band, Sugar Ray. Not once, but twice, do we get to see the two hit wonder in concert action, not counting the backstage scene. To boost this premise, we also get a mime appearance, as well as a bizarre Mel Gibson cameo. For a comedy, “FD” is devoid of laughs, and the home run gags, such as a comatose teenager being cleaned in the shower while both the person on the phone and a nosy bellhop confuse what is going on with pedophilia and swinging, don’t just fall short- they keel over in a an explosion of dumpster fire dust.
It’s shocking that Williams appeared here in the same year that he won an Oscar for his work on “Good Will Hunting”. There is an awkward scene where he does his signature rapid fire impressions, but the rest of the movie he wavers between shrill hysteria and insecurity that made my skin crawl. And that’s before you contrast his character with the wounded man who would ultimately take his own life in 2014. There’s also very little chemistry between him and Crystal, with Williams’ mental instability poorly meshing with Crystal’s bizarrely miscast tough Type A personality phoniness, as they both become son smitten. Greenwood’s presence in the film is a shame too, with him appearing in the superior “The Sweet Hereafter” the same year as well. Here, his character is an afterthought, confined to the comedy hell of being tipped in an outhouse, before just abandoning his search for his step child. Perhaps worst of all, Hofheimer’s teenager character isn’t wayward and developing- he’s a sociopathic creep- though in his defence he’s much like his mother who has no problem lying to the 2 main characters that she uses as volunteer bounty hunters by lying about their paternity. Crystal sees through the charade and explains how great it is- but it’s not. Sounds like the movie itself. This Father’s Day, it would be best to watch… anything else.


1.5/5


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