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Hollywood Ending
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Directed by Woody Allen.
A down-on-his luck auteur gets one more chance at the big time -- provided his neuroses don't swallow him whole -- in Woody Allen's 33rd feature release, Hollywood Ending. Allen plays Val Waxman, a one-time cinematic genius who's resorted to taking advertisement work to pay the bills for himself and his airhead live-in girlfriend, Lori (Debra Messing). Val finds his luck is about to change, however, when he receives the script for The City Never Sleeps, a period noir set against the backdrop of 1940s New York City. It seems his ex-wife, Ellie (Tea Leoni), now an executive at Galaxy Pictures, has been pulling for him to direct the picture, claiming he's the only man who can do justice to the script. She even manages to convince her boyfriend, Hal (Treat Williams), Galaxy's high-powered studio head, to take a chance on Val's "unique vision." Just when the cameras are ready to roll, however, Val finds that unique vision in jeopardy -- literally -- as he's struck with a psychosomatic case of blindness. When physicians and psychiatrists fail to cure him, Val contrives a scheme to forge ahead with the picture, for fear of blowing his one last chance at greatness. Hollywood Ending co-stars George Hamilton and Mark Rydell. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Hollywood Ending (2002, USA, Wo ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Virtually everyone considers Hollywood Ending near the bottom of the barrel for Woody Allen films. But out of all the bad films that Allen has made (get ready: Love and Death, Stardust Memories, September, Another Woman, Celebrity, and Small Time Crooks) it's at the most entertaining. At least it isn't self indulgent, pretencious or boring, which is what happens when Allen is usually at his worst. In his review, Edwin correctly noted that it's odd that the film is his third longest, but among the least substinitve. Allen plays filmmaker Val Waxman, who is considered by many to be talented to but unreliable. Due to a stroke of luck, his ex-wife (Tea Leoni) finds a script he is perfect for and convinces her studio executive husband, Hal (Treat Williams) to allow him to make it. Val seems fixed for a major comeback when he psycho-somatically goes blind. Can he direct a movie blind? Yes, if a confident helps him. Will it be good? Does it matter? The criticisms that everyone has p ... " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens A Good Starting Point For Allen ...
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
is neutral about it.
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"While certainly not one of the Woodman's best, this was only the 2nd or 3rd Allen film I'd ever seen, and the first time I saw it, I knew I'd better watch some more Woody Allen films. I was watching with my uncle, and we both could not stop laughing at scene where he falls off the set - it's just great comedic timing. Unfortunately, on a second viewing (and after seeing many other, better, Allen films), I didn't find it as endearing, but the performances are still good throughout, particularly Leoni and Messing (whom I've never really cared for). If you're interested in Woody Allen's oeuvre, I'd say start here, because you'll be intrigued, but there's much better fare out there. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
A funny, promising setup gives way to endless schtick in Woody Allen's well-cast but slack farce. Despite its loaded subject matter -- namely, big-budget filmmaking -- this is no Player: Save for a few throwaway industry jokes, Hollywood Ending is mostly pratfalls and slapstick, centered around a neurotic conceit that even Allen, cinema's neurotic laureate, can't pull off. Once afflicted with hysterical blindness, his Val Waxman spends much of the movie fumbling and stumbling around a movie set, to rapidly diminishing comedic results. Allen has made entire films on such slight premises before -- Zelig and his chapter of New York Stories, Oedipus Wrecks, come to mind -- but those films were at once richer with subtext and more economical. Ending's climax, on the other hand, comes after at least 20 minutes of painfully broad, extraneous comedy, and hinges on a character who's barely been mentioned, let alone seen. All this notwithstanding, Allen evinces spry, witty turns from his supporting cast, including the ever-sharp Tea Leoni, a pleasantly ditzy Debra Messing, and, of all people, the ageless, orange-hued lothario George Hamilton. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 

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