Permanent Midnight

Reviewed by: AceOfSpades

February 24, 1999

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I saw "Permanent Midnight," a film by a guy named Valdoz starring Ben Stiller. It's the story of Hollywood writer & junkie Jerry Stahl, who apparently was a writer on (of all things) "ALF." That's right. The "Alien Life Form" puppet.

Stiller is surprising in the lead role. It's an "acting chops" kind of role, all mannerisms and junkie twitches, but I thought Stiller did a pretty good job at it.

There are a couple of problems with this film. First, "ALF" becomes an English-accented Green puppet named "Mr. Chompers." This is nobody's fault, of course; I know the ALF people would never allow this kind of film to use the license of their hot commodity. The fact that a smack zombie was writing ALF will delay his transition to a big-screen big-budget movie by at least three or four months. (Look for "ALF: The Movie" starring Christopher Walken, John Goodman, Rosie O'Donnel, Elizabeth Shue, the Olsen Twins, and Jim Carrey as the voice of Alf in May of 2001.)

But let's face it: When you know (unfortunately) what ALF looks like, a radioactive/living-dead-corpse green puppet is distracting.

Okay. On to more substantive criticism.

The film is thin. We're promised the rise and fall of a Hollywood writer. In fact, the film is all fall, with a little bit of recovery. Jerry Stahl lands a $5000 a week job writing Mr. Chompers in the first few minutes of the film. We have scarcely any idea what he was doing beforehand. Was he struggling? Was he getting the occasional odd job? Was he using? We don't really know.

Of course, Stahl doesn't land the ALF/Mr. Chompers gig on the strength of his talent alone. To get the job, he must marry an beautiful English woman television executive who needs her green card. And who plays this "beautiful" woman? Elizabeth Hurley. So Stahl has to marry a rich Elizabeth Hurley in order to secure a $5K/wk gig. Talk about a deal with the devil. (Not only that, but the Elizabeth Hurley character is sweet, supportive, and loyal. Like I said. A deal with the devil.)

In a lot of ways, all junkie movies are exactly like every other junkie movie. We have the desperate jonesing. The embarassing encounters with straights while stoned out of your head. Stoned job interviews. Methadone. Expressionistic scenes of stoned debauchery. (Here, Stahl and a crackhead, zooming on crack, are in an abandoned skyscraper office, running and jumping and crashing into the windows. The windows don't break, and they're just knocked back to the floor after each suicidal leap.)

And, of course, we have the "Worst Thing I've Ever, Ever Done when Stoned Sequence." This involves a jonesing Stahl trying desperately to score while he's babysitting his new infant child. Fortunately for Stahl, but a bit unfortunately for dramatic effect, this episode doesn't turn out to be nearly as heartwrenching or disasterous as it might have.

The story is told in flashbacks, told between bouts of lovemaking to a fellow recovering Junkie who picks Stahl up at his halfway house job (serving burgers and fishsticks). I'm biased towards linear narrative. Still, I just don't see how this manner of telling the story added anything to the dramatic effect. If anything, it detracts from dramatic impact-- we know from the beginning, after all, that Stahl makes it through recovery, is not incarcerated, is not in a madhouse, is not dead. And we know he'll end up making it with a hot blonde.

Overall, a diverting film, but not a gripping or memorable one.

 

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