Over the years, there have been innumerable films made about the Civil Rights
movement of the 1960s, to the point where a filmmaker couldn't possibly say
anything that hasn't already been said before. With that noted, "Crazy in
Alabama" doesn't have any original insights into the era, nor is it
particularly well-handled in that arena. Fortunately, we virtually get two
45-minute movies that interweave between one another, until they come
together in the climax, and the other story is the one that sparkles.
Based on the novel by Mark Childress, this comedy-drama, set in the summer of
1965 in the Deep South, makes no excuses for its eccentricities, as Lucille
(Melanie Griffith), a 34-year-old housewife with seven children, tells her
mother (Sandra Seacat) even before the opening credits that she not only
poisoned her husband, but decapitated him. Wacky, but otherwise not
dangerous, Lucille did what she did because her abusive marriage was
suffocating her, and she has no regrets. Leaving her kids with her mother,
Lucille, and with her husband's head in tow, sets off for Hollywood to become
what she's always dreamt of being--an actress. But not so fast, because as
Lucille's story plays out, the film is narrated by her nephew, Peejoe (Lucas
Black), a 13-year-old who admires his Aunt Lucille to no end, and is sent
away to live with his loving uncle (David Morse) and narrow-minded aunt
(Cathy Moriarty) for the summer. While at the city's public swimming pool, he
briefly meets another kid (Louis Miller Jr.) just a few years older than he
before witnessing him later thrown from a fence by the crooked sheriff (Meat
Loaf Aday) after banishing him from the pools because of his race. The kid
dies, the sheriff claims he never touched him, but Peejoe knows the truth,
and doesn't want him to get away with it. Meanwhile, as Lucille garners a
guest spot on the television show, "Bewitched," she senses that the police
are soon going to close in on her.
While the story of Peejoe, as he learns several life lessons about the
importance of equality and tolerance, feels rather by-the-numbers and
predictable, "Crazy in Alabama" ultimately works due to the unforgettable
character of Lucille, played by Melanie Griffith in her first truly
worthwhile starring role since 1991's "Paradise." Griffith is often
criticized for playing the ditzy blond with the childish, high voice, and
those detractors of her work have always mystified me. While she may not
always make the right career moves, Griffith is a wonderful actress who can
effortlessly play both comedy and drama, and some people seem to forget that
she was nominated for an Academy Award in 1988 for her breakthrough role in
"Working Girl." "Crazy in Alabama" plays up both sides of her acting talent,
and she steals the film away from everyone else within the first five
minutes. Just take a look at the sequence midway through in which Lucille is
talking on the phone with Peejoe, and after he asks her if she's alright, she
replies, "Yes, I'm alright. I'm free! For the first time in my entire life I
am free!" Griffith says the words with such effervescent life that it's
obvious she is a performer who loves what she does, and is instantly charming.
As her counterpart, Lucas Black gives another effective, understated
performance after his role in 1996's "Sling Blade." If the subplot about the
wrongful murder of the black child, and Peejoe's struggle to let people know
the truth concerning his death, is cliched, at least Black is able to create
a character that is worth following, even when the plot surrounding him isn't.
Both characters end up together for a climactic trial, after Lucille has been
arrested, and my heart almost sank. After all, did we really need to have to
sit through another stock courtroom scene? Luckily, it worked, managing to
pull both laughs and bittersweet truth out of the matters at hand, and never
went sappy like so many films of its ilk usually do. On the downside, the
picture ends before the other subplot, involving the crime that the sheriff
commits, is solved, and so we are left hanging by a plot thread that we had
just dedicated 45 minutes of our time with.
"Crazy in Alabama" is helmed by actor Antonio Banderas, making his directing
debut, and even when the film smells of the word, "amateur," Banderas can
rest assured that, in a week which saw six major film releases, he made one
out of only two movies that I liked (the other being Martin Scorsese's
masterful "Bringing Out the Dead"). The premise may not sound like the most
probable choice for someone from a foreign country, but Banderas proves that
you can successfully make a film that doesn't relate directly to you, simply
if the underlying themes are felt deeply enough.
Copyright © 1999 Dustin Putman