D: Michael Patrick Jann; with Kirstie Alley, Ellen Barkin, Kirsten Dunst, Denise
Richards, Allison Janney, Will Sasso, Mindy Sterling, Sam McMurray, Mo Gaffney, Nora
Dunn. (PG-13, 93 min.)
Coming as this does from a television director (Jann, late of MTV's The State)
and a television writer (Lona Williams of The Drew Carrey Show),it's no wonder that
this biting parody of flyover-state beauty contests feels like a bad made-for-TV
movie of the week. Jann does his best with what is essentially weak material, and
his mockumentary approach is a worthy tack; he just doesn't go as far as he should,
which results in a stillborn comedy of subterfuge and backbiting that's all hair
and no teeth. It all feels a bit like an uninspired take on Christopher Guest's genuinely
hilarious Waiting for Guffman. The film opens as a documentary crew arrives in Mount
Rose, Minnesota, to film the Sarah Rose Miss Teen Princess America Pageant, a cosmetic
company-sponsored event that has thrown the entire town into an uproar, resulting
in the kind of underhanded and duplicitous territoriality we've always assumed is
part and parcel of the pageant mystique. Battling it out for the title are Becky
Leeman (Richards, in full pout mode), the spoiled rich kid whose mother Gladys (Alley)
won the same honor way back when, and Amber Atkins (Dunst), the vaguely white trash
good girl - smart, cute, honest, and wondering what she's doing embroiled in this
whole affair. Amber's mother Annette (Barkin, with beer can firmly clutched in her
hand throughout the film), has long despised the Leemans, and vice versa, making
this less a contest than an all-out war. Into this combustible mix Jann throws a
bizarre panel of judges which includes a borderline pederast who ogles the young
contestants at every opportunity and a dimwitted pair of country rubes, one of whom
is clearly retarded. It's not just unfunny, it's also patently offensive, which is
par for the course in Drop Dead Gorgeous. The film manages to take a clever idea
or two and run them into the ground with all the finesse of a backhoe. One of the
film's less clever running gags (alongside Ms. Atkins' alcoholism) is the over-the-top
use of Minnesota vernacular, including the cringe-inducing "ya, you betcha"
which crops up almost as much as it does in the Coen Brother's Fargo, a film in which
such dialogue was actually put to good use. Jann's use of the mockumentary style
of filmmaking here is also deeply flawed, frequently abandoning the conceit and turning
to straight comedy, which of course renders the whole effect null and void. Alley's
maddeningly broad style of comic theatrics doesn't help matters much, either, though
at least Dunst comes across as a gifted actress here. She's the only bright spot
in a film constructed of used and confused gags - a lowbrow clunker with highbrow
intentions.
bomb
--Marc Savlov
Capsule Reviews
Drop Dead Gorgeous 
Drop Dead Gorgeous 
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