America's sweetheart in a moment of refined subtlety. |
On the occasion of the 6th
Annual White Elephant Blogathon, I’ve brought this little electronic soapbox of
mine out of hibernation. Many thanks to
Paul Clark for putting this event together, and for realizing that to pay for
my sins, I would have to watch the following film.
Sometimes, in my darker moments (or when
I’m just plain bored), I like to imagine an alternate reality in which Jenny
McCarthy married Tom Green. Yes, in real
life she was fellow funnyman Jim Carrey’s paramour for some four years, a
coupling that seemed to be a match made in Hollywood heaven. But even though both share a love of
rubber-faced gurning in their public and screen personas, as Carrey’s career
progressed he seemed more and more to be striving for an increasingly
pathos-based existence, tempering his manic, Jerry Lewis on crack demeanor in
the name of showing off his more dramatic chops. At heart, Carrey has always been the classic
definition of the sad clown; as early as his cover appearance in the November
1999 issue of Vanity Fair, he was lamenting the inherent loneliness of his
life, how all of his fame and fortune couldn’t quite salve the scars of a
failed marriage and the lack of a soulmate.
That interview was tied in with the promotional tour for Carrey’s Andy
Kaufman biopic Man on the Moon, so I guess it’s appropriate that he would
try to show that, like the notoriously kayfabe-bound Kaufman, there was a
loveable child hiding beneath all of the mannered zaniness.
Tom Green, on the other hand, always struck me as McCarthy’s true romantic and artistic counterpart. If Carrey’s hambone antics were, at heart, a youthful cry for attention, Green’s confrontational gross-out act was a whole-hearted embrace of almost avant garde comedic sensibilities. Or maybe it’s just because he’s Canadian. In any case, I was a late convert to Green’s act, but when I was hooked, I was hooked something fierce, culminating in my unabashed fandom of his surreal sole directorial effort Freddy Got Fingered. (Full disclosure here: Freddy was my submission for this year’s White Elephant pool, so I guess that I’m sorta breaking the rules by talking about it.)
In my alternate reality, McCarthy and
Green can manically freestyle a life devoted to epic gross out comedies and Kaufman-esque
publicity stunts. Indeed, Green
attempted the latter during his brief courtship and marriage to Drew Barrymore,
including a (ahem) botched wedding ceremony at the conclusion of a Saturday
Night Live episode. But like McCarthy
and Carrey, Green and Barrymore were always just thiiis much the mismatched
pair (hmmm….wonder of Carrey and Barrymore ever considered hooking up…)
And why stop at those bits of performance
art? Can you imagine the genetic
offspring that Green and McCarthy would have sired? The prospect that such children might forever
walk the line between being mad geniuses and congenitally annoying gadflys
might be somewhat tragic for normal folk.
But for the brood of these two living cartoons? All part of the ride, jack.
But what the hell does all of this Tom
Green-centric fantasizing have to do with this article? Isn’t there a film attached to this Blogathon
assignment? Well, yeah. But patience, my friend, patience.
Jenny McCarthy has always existed as a
slightly fascinating prospect in the back of my mind. I can’t honestly say that I’ve spent too much
time thinking about her over the last ten years, but examining her fifteen
minutes of fame yields some interesting insights into who she is/was and what
she represents. My first realization
that McCarthy had captured at least some portion of the cultural zeitgeist came
on that fateful day in the summer of 1996 when I laid eyes on her first Rolling
Stone cover appearance (pictured above.)
That single image captured the appeal that had shot her into at least
the sub-stratosphere in her role as the comic sidekick on MTV’s Singled Out: an
aggressive, almost hyper-realized sexuality, mixed with a crass and lowbrow
sensibility. In an era when the
ultra-pneumatic Pamela Anderson reigned as America’s dominant sex symbol, McCarthy
seemed to provide a refreshing alternative.
Anderson was the ultimate realization of every guy’s airbrushed sexual
fantasy, a seething mass of sensuality that was nonetheless strangely antiseptic;
McCarthy, on the other hand, subverted this sense of eroticism by always
reminding her audience of the down and dirty physical aspects of sex. For a brief moment, she trumped Anderson by
serving as the true American male ideal: the Playboy model who would trade fart
jokes with you.
And then…the moment passed. McCarthy never seemed to latch on to any
permanent step on the fame ladder, appearing in bit roles in several films,
none of which effectively exploited her comic chops. The American male psyche moved on to the next
set of cultural sexpots and McCarthy was left to create what career she could.
Which brings us to Dirty Love, the 2005 film that she wrote and starred in for director (and then husband) John Asher. In trying to sell this flick to you, the loyal reader, is it enough to say that not once, but twice during the first half McCarthy, gripped in the throes of existential agony and ecstasy, explodes in a repeated, positively Molly Bloom-like recitation of “Oh My God”? Or that the scene which predicates her second explosion features a nebbish Woody Allen lookalike at an FHM fashion show nervously vomiting on her ample cleavage, which she then proceeds to violently expose to the leering paparazzi outside (quite possibly the ultimate Jenny McCarthy scene in the way that it mixes eroticism and disgust)? Or that the morning after an unfortunate Ecstasy (spiked with acid)-fuelled sexual experience with a man and his fish, she is graphically struck with her period smack dab in the middle of the supermarket, a scene that climaxes with McCarthy crouched on the floor in a pool of her menstrual blood (a pool which, in any measure of sanity, would indicate that she is dead and just doesn’t know it)?
This brings us back to Freddy Got
Fingered. For those of you who haven’t
experienced this bizarre auterist classic, its highlights include Marisa
Coughlan (as Tom Green’s crippled girlfriend) achieving sexual gratification
via Green beating her dead legs with a stick, Green impulsively pulling over
his car mid-country drive to masturbate a horse who is being readied by its
owners for breeding and (in a scene that will surely never be replicated in a
mainstream film) Green attacking his father (an always game Rip Torn) by
masturbating an elephant in his general direction.
I kept thinking of Freddy during Dirty
Love (at title which, when you think about it, also perfectly sums up McCarthy’s
appeal), for both films serve as uber-vehicles for their stars’ most primitive
impulses, an unleashing of their collective ids onto the viewing space of the
unsuspecting audience. Both actors built
their reputation on wild personas that were slightly sanitized for an MTV
audience, so both films seem to serve as a dare to those old fans (“You wanna
see me be crazy? You wanna see me be
gross? Here ya go, bud!”).
But both films also serve as biting
critiques of the Hollywood scene. In his
DVD commentary to Freddy (I think I’m the only American to own this film, let
alone to have bought it on its release date), Green admits that his underlying
motivation for creating this “borderline Dadaist provocation” (as Nathan Rabin
later put it) was to satirize the popularity of the gross-out comedies that
were then so very much in fashion (and in which Green played a role in Road
Trip) by creating the mother of all gross-out flicks. Similarly, even though Dirty Love is pretty
wretched fare, there’s a strong satirical element to McCarthy’s script, as she
skewers the hollow feminine expectations that Hollywood sets up for actresses. Her best friends (including Carmen
Electra as a wannabe thug life princess) are stuck adhering to shallow, false
personas in an effort to get ahead; the climax of the film includes blonde
bimbo with a heart of gold Kam Heskin
excoriating a vapid, overweight mega-budget director for preferring a
breast-enhanced floozy over her and for perpetuating those unrealistic
expectations. Indeed, McCarthy’s
hyper-gory setpieces serve as an equal provocation to gender stereotypes. Many a male actor has played around with the
boundaries of gross-out humor, only to retain some sense of clout, but McCarthy’s
go-for broke approach (even though her prime career was, by this point, kaput)
is easier for a male audience to see as going way too far.
(On a side note, McCarthy and John Asher
would divorce in the fall of 2005, shortly after this film was released. Did it ultimately break up their
marriage? Or did it serve as Asher’s
strange exploitation of his then bride?
After all, the central plot hook that gets things rolling is McCarthy’s
Rebecca seeking revenge on her vapid model ex-boyfriend, who she walks in on
while he’s diddling another woman?)
Those unrealistic male expectations are
countered by the film’s nerdy hero, whom McCarthy eventually walks off with
hand in hand. And perhaps this is where
the real story resides. For said
long-suffering, torch-carrying friend is played by Eddie Kaye Thomas, best
known as the pretentious, Stifler’s mom-scoring Paul Finch from the American
Pie films (which in some ways represented the cultural apex of the gross-out
comedy fad.) Take a look at the main
cast of the Pie films sometime, and gaze in terror at the curse which must have
been placed on most of them via their involvement with these films (famously
satirized in Jason Biggs’s cameo in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back). At the time of their release, I remember
thinking that Thomas had the potential to fill a solid niche in the filmic
universe for years to come; in another alternate universe, he might’ve followed
the John Cusack route by cutting his teeth in lowbrow stoner comedies, only to
springboard into more mature fare. But
he’s never quite elevated himself above low-budget fare, save for supporting
roles in the Harold and Kumar films.
And as the title character in a 2001
mid-budget film directed by a then-popular comedian.
A film called Freddy Got Fingered.
Thank you for struggling through DIRTY LOVE. You nailed one reason I chose it for the White Elephant: its connection to FREDDY GOT FINGERED, which I still recall as a "terrible movie", now rediscovered as an overlooked classic. The other intended connection I thought of was BRIDESMAIDS, featuring Jenny's cousin Melissa in an Oscar-nominated role, about beautiful women unafraid to play raunchy, not unlike Jenny in DL.
ReplyDeleteI guess I saw this flick originally and thought some of those gross-out scenes - especially the menstrual blood supermarket scene - were memorable for going too far in a way great comedy can without any of the comedic talent required. I foisted it upon the White Elephant - and subsequently you, because I was hoping beyond hope that DL was misunderstood. Thanks again for an entertaining read.
Hey, many thanks! Glad you enjoyed my ramblings. I wish that I had focused more on the evolution of the female gross-out comedic form (I thought of BRIDESMAIDS too), but I was tired and had to get the post out to Paul. Someday...
ReplyDeleteHeh. No worries. I'm surprised you were able to write complete sentences after DIRTY LOVE. Cheers!
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