Robin Williams

Robin Williams was a brilliant standup comedian, a master of improvisation, and an exceptional mimic. He became very famous for his brilliant improvisations– precisely the reason why it became impossible for him to make a truly great film. His talent was not the talent that is useful to a director or writer when creating a film. He made films because Hollywood makes films with celebrities, not actors.

As an actor, I always thought he was less than average, confusing restraint and modulation for character. Hollywood knew what to do with him– in the perverse way Hollywood deals with all original talents: take out all the guts, add some heart-warming dreck, and make the audience feel sophisticated. Make him a saintly, wise, lovable psychiatrist, only barely more believable than Liv Tyler in “Reign Over Me”, who devotes all of his waking hours to a single disturbed math whiz and provides miraculous cures that no one in the real world has ever experienced. Dress him as a woman and set his fake breasts on fire in the preposterous and schmaltzy “Mrs. Doubtfire”: a sure Hollywood winner because our hero is funny and wicked and naughty AND– he loves his family! This was a conceit so fantastical that it took hours and hours of the best make-up crew in Hollywood to make it even remotely not ridiculous. Set him up against cardboard cutout stereo-typed villains — in most of his films, but most egregiously in “Patch Adams”– so the audience feels wonderful about being on the side of people they can’t stand in real life. His roles were emasculated, neutered, homogenized, cleaned up and packaged for mass audiences.

But I would have liked to see him live as Estragon in “Waiting for Godot” (with Steve Martin as Vladimir). But even there, at least one reviewer was ambivalent about Williams’ “stage antics”. (Steve Martin, in the same production, was also dissed by the reviewer, for blending too far into the background, a phenomenon I have noted, in which great comic talents believe that by not being antic they are actually “acting” and creating a character.

Amid all the drivel that always rises to the top upon the death of a popular entertainer, the most ridiculous is that, besides being a great comic, he was also a great actor: he was not. I think people were so impressed by the contrast between his drawn-in, restrained, sedated performances an actor, especially in “One Hour Photo”, that they confused the absence of character expression with the presence of talent.

Williams’ talents were far more suited to secondary characters, dissolute friends, unfaithful husbands, writers and artists, drunks, and bums. So “The Fisher King” was an ideal platform for him– except, they couldn’t stand to have him play a real homeless psycho, so they eliminated all the real-life characteristics of homeless people– the things that make them a real problem to deal with– and sweetened him up and cleaned him up so he was adorable and safe, and thereby obviated the entire point of the movie. The only example of Hollywood doing this worse is “Reign Over Me”– which, it must be admitted, was way more repulsive.

Of all of them– and some were very, very awful– “The Dead Poets Society” pissed me off the most because it was a calculated pitch to audiences who think they have better taste than most people because they will go to a movie with the word “poet” in the title and features scattered readings of one or two lines from poets who are famous for being poets (but nobody too obscure, please, or my friends won’t be as impressed), but who could never actually stand listening to any poem more complex than a limerick.

“Dead Poets Society” was never really about poetry or life at all. It was about admiring yourself for seeing a movie in which a charismatic actor does everything except poetry. He has the pipe and the patches on the sweater and the high brow manners, but if “Dead Poets Society” showed you, for even an instant, the real stuff of poetry, mass audiences would be offended and frightened and would hurry back to their TV sets. The boys themselves don’t live poetry: they admire it like dilettantes, adopting the symbols and manners but none of the substance of a poetic conscious: they completely forget that great poetry is always about something and only the worst, dullest, least interesting poetry is about poetry.

The sad, sad truth is that Robin Williams did not factor in a single movie that mattered.

Robin Williams Least Worst Films (no, you haven’t seen them):

Have you seen “World’s Greatest Dad”?  Now go see “Dear Evan Hansen”.

Un huh.  Familiar, isn’t it?

The Tragedy of Serious Comedians

I haven’t seen it yet, but I look forward to checking out Will Ferrell’s new film, “Stranger Than Fiction”. New York Times, Roger Ebert, and the Village Voice all seem to like it. Ebert almost gives it a rave, but then, he liked “Notebook”. The Village Voice is made of sterner stuff, so it’s relatively kind review got my attention.

I have a bit of dread of seeing comedians take on roles that they seem to think will establish them as “actors”. There’s a lot of ridiculously inane perception involved. Take a clown. Take away the big red nose. Have him recite poetry. The audience gasps. Art.

It’s like watching a famously great pianist perform. You watch the performance and think, what makes her great? It’s rhythm, right? It’s her feeling for the piece, her interpretation. It’s the way she takes you through a 20 minute sequence of notes and chords and makes it an experience that raises your consciousness.

But the audience is there to see the famous pianist. They will not be disappointed because everybody– the pianist, the conductor, the orchestra– they all know that the audience will not accept the greatness of the pianist unless she puts on a show of bombast and pyrotechnics and spectacular displays of speed and noise. Speed and noise. Most of the audience will never know if any two notes played in sequence are performed beautifully– but it knows that rapid arm movements up and down the keyboard signal virtuosity, and the rest is filled in by the critics, the filters, who ensure that no fakes get through. It would take an utterly remarkable artist to have the guts to come out and perform perfectly, beautifully, a delicate, quiet little song.


There is a bit of a paradox in the fact that comedians like Robin Williams and Jim Carrey feel a need to reign in the flamboyance in some roles in order to convey what they think will be perceived to be a more subtle, rich, and evocative performance. So a comedian who becomes well known for his outrageous, spontaneous, voracious absorption of popular kitsch– imitations, exaggeration, hype– seeks respect by annihilating his own personae. Robin Williams did this so successfully in “One Hour Photo” that he became a crashing bore. It appeared to me that he had confused restraint with subtlety. But there was nothing there in the end.

Helen Mirren’s performance in “The Queen” is exemplary of how it should be done. Never showy or ostentatious, but clearly defined, nuanced, and rich. She never seemed afraid to let you watch her think, or contemplate, or to watch her interact reasonably with others. There was no need for histrionics or flamboyance. She said everything with the way she twirled her pencil or stared up the woods on her Balmoral Estate.


The greatest rock album ever: maybe John Wesley Harding by Bob Dylan. But no one will ever notice it, because all the session musicians, Kenneth Buttrey and Charles McCoy, did, was accompany Dylan perfectly. No show. No ostentation. No schtick.