There's a certain sense of liberation that some movies inspire like few others.
It's a sensation that transcends the typical movie-going experience, a physical
reaction that goes beyond merely being entertained. You'll be sitting in
that darkened theater about halfway through the movie and suddenly be struck
by the unique combination of writing, acting, and directing on the screen
before you. And then the realization hits home: This pathetic piece of
crap is not going to get any better.
Soon after, that impulse for liberation envelops you: Flee. Run. Get the
hell out of the theater and stop wasting your time. Yes, you'll lose whatever
you spent on tickets; yes, it goes against your movie-going conditioning
to leave before the film's over; yes, it's a lonely walk up that empty aisle
amid a sea of curious faces. But you must take a stand! And once you
do, you'll immediately feel a sense of inner tranquillity: You may have been
ripped off, but you were strong enough to leave before being insulted any
further.
Only a few select films have entered my pantheon of walkouts. There was Maid
to Order, in which Ally Sheedy's fairy godmother turned her into a Malibu
maid to teach her a lesson in humility; Straight Talk, in which James
Woods made love to Dolly Parton; Cool World, in which...well, I'm
still not sure what happened in Cool World. Don't get me wrongI
enjoy terrible movies as much as the next cynic; there's something morbidly
amusing about watching some hack's earnest vision of drama turn completely
absurd (ahhhh, Showgirls!). But these movies aren't merely bad; they're
devoid of any fragment of humanity.
Now, another film has joined the woeful ranks: The Matchmaker.
The Matchmaker is about nothing (but not in the way a good episode
of Seinfeld is about nothing). It's ostensibly a romantic comedy crossed
with the quaint-Irish-village sub-genre. Janeane Garofalo stars as Marcy
Tizard, a political aide to a Massachusetts senator running for re-election.
She's sent to Ballinagra, Ireland, to research her candidate's ancestry in
order to ensure his victory. Whaa-aat? Yes indeed, this is the main
point upon which The Matchmaker's plot hingessomehow, if the
candidate can prove he has a genuine Irish heritage, he'll be swept into
office. Ah, such dark satire!
Once Marcy makes it to Ballinagra, she tries to go about her business but
keeps getting distracted by the quirky locals and their Matchmaking Festival.
You see, these humble townsfolk are so charmed by the condescending, insulting,
mean-spirited Marcy that they want to see her fall in love. Consequently,
town matchmaker Dermot (Milo O'Shea) sets her up with Sean (David O'Hara),
the local hunk who gave up PR for bartendingand she falls for him!
What other surprises could The Matchmaker possibly hold?
The biggest shock is why Garofalosurely a smarty pants, if nothing
elsewould choose such a pointless script to star in. Her character's
only defining personality trait is that she rolls her eyes a lot. She has
no backstory, no inner conflicts, no personal goals. Her main interaction
with other characters consists of saying sarcastic things that aren't really
that funny. (Example: "How does it feel to be so stupid? Is it like being
high all the time?" Wooooo!) Garofalo's appeal as a comedienne is
that she spits out the snappy rejoinders we all want to saybut in The
Matchmaker, her bitchiness has been rent of its charm because none of
her one-liners are witty. All that's left is a horrible grouch.
This might have been amusing if her grouch had been let loose amid a quaint
Irish village filled with real charactersbut all we get are
caricatures that wouldn't make the cut in the infinitely superior Local
Hero. These quirky villagers are so cute, so cloying, so fake, that they
all simply adore Marcythus avoiding all the friction that might have
made for an interesting story. O'Hara is the only actor to bring any life
to the proceedings; even though his character is such an obvious set-up (he
turned his back on PR just like Marcy wants to!), he's at least
believablebut why would he want to shack up with such an Ugly American
as Marcy? Wonders never cease.
Unfortunately, even though all this is just dreadful, The Matchmaker
isn't so terrible as to be amusing. It's just numbingly mediocre; nothing
about it stands out in any way. Whenever a movie is "Based on a Screenplay"
by one person, then proceeds to have three other writers for the actual
screenplay, that should be warning enough that the final product is going
to be weak. I read that Garofalo left the theater halfway through The
Matchmaker's premiere; too bad she didn't do the same thing midway through
reading the
script.