PFS Film Review
Cookie's Fortune


 

In Cookie’s Fortune, director Robert Altman takes us to Holly Springs, Mississippi (a town halfway between Memphis and Tupelo) for a mystery caper. Although filmviewers and two of the actors know who is responsible for a death, the police do not, but the real mysteries are wrapped up in the Faulknerian characters, their foibles, and the symbolism of what we see and wish we could understand from Altman’s clues. Cookie (played by Patricia Neal) is the one who dies; she commits suicide. Her nieces Camille and Cora (played by Glenn Close and Julianne Moore) believe that they are the heirs, and Camille insists that they hush up the shame of suicide by faking a break-in, including breaking the glass of a cabinet where guns are kept. However, the door of the gun cabinet keeps opening on its own and cannot close. Other clues just do not make sense to the police, but Cookie’s honest and helpful black caretaker Willis Richland (played by Charles Dutton) of the house is arrested because he appears to have blood on his shirt because he was holding a bag with catfish. The white chief of police (played by Ned Beatty) does not believe that the black man is guilty; when asked why, he replies that they have gone fishing together. But the black man must stay in jail while the case is investigated, so he is joined by the chief of police for a game of scrabble and great-niece Emma (played by Liv Tyler) who offers to be Willis’s cellmate. Affirmative action has provided black and white police officers working harmoniously as if Holly Springs had none of the racial antagonisms experienced elsewhere in Mississippi. Indeed, a sign "In 1897 nothing happened here" seems to suggest that the Supreme Court’s decision legalizing segregation, Plessy versus Ferguson, was never implemented in Holly Springs with Jim Crow legislation. In the end, the police exonerate Willis. We discover that Cookie, the nieces, and Willis have common grandparents; some turned out white, other black, and that Cookie has willed her estate to a black man whom the white nieces hope to placate so that they can move into Cookie’s house. A final mystery is not knowing whether they all ended up living together. The tagline of the film, "Welcome to Holly Springs . . . home of murder, mayhem and catfish enchiladas" is the most delightful spoof of all in a Mississippi that someday may grow beyond distinctions of race and class. MH

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