Ordinary
People-Seriously-Philip Seymour Hoffman’s “Jack Goes Boating” -(2010)-A Film
Review
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
Jack Goes Boating,
starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Amy Ryan, John Ortiz, Daphne Rubin-Vega,
directed by Philip Seymour Hoffman, 2010
Damn Philip Seymour for
letting “boy,” you know heroin get to him. That was my immediate reaction after
viewing, no, my immediate reaction after about two minutes of the film under
review Jack Goes Boating. A beautiful
talent that gave us an Oscar performance in the difficult and tricky Capote
(not letting his performance get in the way of the story line from Capote’s In Cold Blood )and a rip roaring one in Pirate Radio among others goes to the mat, goes mano y mano
with himself one more here explaining what the first sentence above was my
immediate reaction. I don’t know if his paramour in the film Connie, played by
Amy Ryan was right in saying Jack, the character Hoffman played was sexy but
his presence was felt throughout the film even in moments of utter silence. Maybe
particularly in those moments. And his deft directorial hand as well as he lets
the four main characters go through their paces.
The headline here tells
the story-ordinary people trying to make their places in the sun in hard-bitten
New York with all the humor, horror, pathos, and bathos that gilded town lays
on its denizens and have them still survive. The film based on the successful
play centers on the up and down relationship between two guys, Jack and Clyde
played by John Ortiz, who work as chauffeurs for Jack’s uncle. Jack is letting
the world go by mostly but Clyde has aspirations and is in a up and down
relationship with his wife Lucy, played by Daphne Rubin-Vega, which before the
film is over is in Connie’s words not where she and Jack should go. Connie
enters the picture because whatever their personal differences Clyde and Lucy
want to set Jack up with her. Neither Jack nor Connie are Type A’s and might
not have met if left to their own devices but as the film progresses all of a
sudden you can sense that they will cling to each other for dear life.
The beauty of the story
is that budding relationship where Jack, once he is smitten by Connie, is
willing to move mountains to get next to her. Well maybe not mountains but was
willing to learn how to swim in order to take Connie at her wish boating come
New York summer with Clyde’s guidance (Jack a non-swimmer like lots of urban
folk who never got around to it in their youth just like they don’t get
driver’s licenses or learn to ride a bicycle). Willing to learn how to cook as
well beyond cooking rather than starving from a top chef who was once, maybe
still was Lucy’s lover a situation which caused plenty of heat between Lucy and
Clyde as Jack and Connie were heading the other way. Heading the other way
despite a dope-filled debacle of a dinner. This one was riveting like I said
from minute two. Yeah, damn Philip Seymour and his “boy” problem.
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