Ed
Wood: Do you know I've even had producers re-cut
my movies?
Orson Welles: I hate when that happens.
Ed Wood: And they're always
trying to cast their buddies, it doesn't even matter if they're right
for the part!
Orson Welles: Tell me about it. I'm supposed
to do a thriller for Universal, but they want Charlton Heston to play
a Mexican...
-from
Ed Wood
spoken by Johnny Depp and
Vincent D'Onofrio
While
Whale's films are revered for their impeccable style, Edward D. Wood Jr.'s
are remembered for being hopelessly inept. Whale was openly gay. Wood
was supposedly straight, but enjoyed wearing women's clothes, especially
angora sweaters. Like Whale, Wood also fought in one of the big wars.
Unlike Whale, he once parachuted behind enemy lines wearing women's
undergarments under his uniform.
Tim
Burton's sweet film, Ed Wood,
poses the following question: What if a filmmaker was as passionate about
cinema as Orson Welles but possessed none of his talent? Johnny
Depp, backed by an outstanding cast, stars as the sublimely ungifted
Wood who, with his unconventional circle of friends, are responsible for
some of the most amateurish - but entertaining - films ever made. Director
Burton focuses on the hilarious obstacles they faced, but also on the
touching and poignant friendship between Wood and his star, Bela Lugosi
(Martin Landau in an Oscar-winning performance). Wood was ecstatic that
an actor of Lugosi's stature would work with him. Lugosi was washed up,
and addicted to morphine, and was thrilled just to be working in films
again.
One
of the ironies of Wood's films is that despite their low budgets, awful
scripts and bad acting, Wood believed in them and his infectious enthusiasm
inspired his "ensemble." Glen or Glenda?
was supposed to be an exploitative film to cash in on the Christine
Jorgenson scandal; Wood tried to make its transvestite hero sympathetic.
Plan 9 From Outer Space attempts to condemn mankind's suicidal
fascination with nuclear technology but all anyone ever notices is the
obvious fact that its late "star," Bela Lugosi, only appears
for a grand total of 3 minutes and that a much taller stand-in (with darker
hair) holds a cape in front of his face for the remainder of the film.
While
most of the events are true, Burton indulges in a few flights of fancy,
including a fictional scene where Wood meets his hero, Orson Welles. In
perhaps the seminal moment of the film, Wood storms off the set, dressed
in drag, and wanders into a nearby restaurant to find Welles. It is the
"beautiful" Orson Welles from Citizen Kane, (an uncanny
performance from Vincent D'Onofrio) and the cinema giant and the not-so-great
director share tales of studio interference. This scene beautifully illustrates
how both a genius and a hack can be possessed by the same dreams while
enduring the same setbacks. Welles ends by telling Woods that "visions
are worth fighting for. Why waste your life making someone else's dreams?"
Ed
Wood also takes place in the 50s and the same homophobic
sensibilities seen in Gods and Monsters are also present here.
Wood's girlfriend leaves him because she can no longer take his angora
sweater fetish or the "freaks" that he hangs out with. When
Wood arrives on the set of Plan 9 wearing women's clothing, the
film's backers (who happen to be Baptist ministers!) are horrified.
Only
a quirky, off-beat director like Burton would even conceive of
making such a movie, let alone bring it off with such success. It is not
necessary to be familiar with Wood's works in order to enjoy it, but it
helps with some of the best "in-jokes." The low-budget look
of Wood's films is impeccably re-created. The same is true in the casting
of Wood's offbeat circle of friends. Ed Wood
offers dead-on impersonations by Landau as Bela Lugosi, Jeffrey Jones
as the bogus psychic Criswell, Lisa Marie as Vampira and Sarah Jessica
Parker as Wood's actress girl friend. Bill Murray also excels as a lonely
and lovable transsexual named "Bunny" Breckenridge. Like John
Lithgow's portrayal of Roberta Muldoon in The World According to Garp,
Murray infuses sensitivity into a role that could easily have been
turned into an offensive cartoon. ("Nix on the nelly," he tells
a gang of aging drag queens auditioning for Glen
or Glenda, "but don't lose the naivete.")
In other hands, the
resulting film might have been mean-spirited but Burton never ridicules
Wood and that is a good thing. It is, in fact, one of the greatest movies
about filmmaking ever made. Like Gods and Monsters, this is personal
cinema at its best. These are two films which get better upon each subsequent
viewing. Both can be rented at video stores everywhere.
More
On James Whale
Frankenstein, The Old Dark House, The Bride
of Frankenstein
More On Ed Wood
Glen or Glenda
More On Tim Burton
and Johnny Depp
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