Directed by: Milos Forman
Premise: A biopic of performer Andy Kaufman (Jim
Carrey). The story focuses on Kaufman’s artistic projects, including his
television work on Taxi,
his wrestling career, and his live performances.
What Works: Man on the Moon is another
excellent biopic from director Forman, whose other projects include Amadeus and The People
vs. Larry Flynt. The film smartly works Kaufman’s unique style of
entertainment into the aesthetic of the film. Carrey gives the performance of
his career as Kaufmann. It is the kind of biopic role in which a familiar lead
actor disappears, like Phillip Seymour Hoffman in Capote or Charlize Theron in Monster and he is able to create a complete sense of the character, including
Kaufman’s innocence and naiveté. The most thankless role of the film is Danny
DeVito as Kaufman’s agent George Shapiro. As Shapirio, it is up to DeVito to
represent the audience trying to understand Kaufman. Shapiro’s struggles with
Andy, in some cases trying to reign him in, are not the actions of a small
minded censor but the pragmatic concerns of someone struggling with the
relationship between art and commerce. Shapiro’s also goes on a journey in
this film, as he attempts to forward Kaufman’s post-modern entertainment in
the face of opposition from network executives and others who cannot or will not
understand the joke. As a period piece the film is able to recreate 1970s and
80s America an convey how ground breaking Kaufman’s work was.
What Doesn’t: In some ways Man on the Moon is an attempt to mend Kaufman’s legacy and explain his art to the audience.
While that is a noble intention, it is somewhat problematic because a critical
element of Kaufman’s act is that his jokes were played on people who did not
understand for the people who did. Given that Kaufman is now deceased, these
concerns are not as urgent.
DVD extras: Andy: The Andy Kaufman Story documentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, music videos, DVD ROM features.
Bottom Line: Man on the Moon is a great
picture of a complex artist and his work. The film is not entirely a tribute
piece to the man, as the story and Carrey’s characterization finds faults with
him personally, but it is a tribute piece to his work. The film also
demonstrates what contemporary performers like Sacha Baron Cohen or Matt Stone
and Trey Parker and even Marilyn Manson owe to Kaufman’s legacy.