FIND MOVIES
Movie List
Loading ...
or
Find Theaters and Movie Times
or
Search Movies

Prairie state

Altman spins Keillor’s Companion piece
By PETER KEOUGH  |  June 7, 2006
2.5 2.5 Stars


THE SHOW GOES ON— but it’s not a really great one.

I never listened to more than a few minutes of Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion. I found it precious, pontificating, sentimental, and self-consciously strange. These are also qualities that Robert Altman can revert to in moments of weakness, and such moments have proliferated of late. Since his last great film, Short Cuts, in 1993, he’s finally become bland enough to win an Oscar, though only for “Lifetime Achievement.”

Although otherwise unremarkable, Prairie provides a quick summary of some of that achievement, incorporating many of his themes and stylistic traits, in particular his recurrent motif of following the intersecting paths of people in a distinctive setting. As in most of his films from M*A*S*H (1970) to The Company (2003), Altman here turns his camera loose on an institution and uncovers a microcosm of society at large. (Add his vérité style and he’s the fictional counterpart of Frederick Wiseman.)

Unfortunately, Keillor’s radio show doesn’t stack up well with a Korean War front-line surgical hospital, the country-music scene in the 70s, or the sordid snakepit of the film industry itself when it comes to compelling narrative. Rather, the storytelling resembles one of the best scenes in the movie, when Keillor is left stranded with nothing between himself and dead air except endless riffs on a duck-tape commercial. Prairie too can seem a desperate, if sometimes inspired, attempt to fill the time.

Starting with the premise. A Texas corporation has bought up Keillor’s show and the old Minneapolis theater from which it airs. The honchos want to replace it all with a parking lot, and their “ax man” (Tommy Lee Jones) is coming by to pull the plug after the program’s last broadcast.

And so the show goes on, with Keillor (whom I find to be a combination of David Letterman and a Smurf) untidily hosting his potpourri of cornball songs, comedy, and tall tales, attended to by his pregnant assistant, Molly (Maya Rudolph), who is kind of the film’s Radar O’Reilly, while refusing to acknowledge that this show is his last. And it’s not a really great show. The acts include the singing cowboys Dusty and Lefty (Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly, not raising a sweat), whose “Bad Jokes” lives up to its title; the sister act of Rhonda and Yolanda Johnson (Lily Tomlin and Meryl Streep trying too hard), who reminisce backstage about past heartbreaks and high jinks with strained nostalgia; and Yolanda’s surly daughter Lola (Lindsay Lohan), who reflects on the painlessness of suicide in her poetry and ends up singing an unremarkable “Frankie & Johnny.” I liked best Kevin Kline’s Guy Noir; Kline offers at least one hilarious improvisation, though his voiceover narrative sounds at times like a W.B. Mason commercial.

All these people have issues, some less contrived than others, though overriding them all is Death, a/k/a “The Dangerous Woman” (Virginia Madsen), a pale, beautiful specter who prowls the shadows of the theater with less grace than Altman’s camera. “The death of an old man is not a tragedy,” she says when an old man dies, and like much of the rest of the dialogue, it sounds like a platitude. Until it sinks in that for the 81-year-old Altman, this film, or the next one, or the one after, could be his last. If at least one of them is not a triumphant swan song, it would be tragic indeed.

  Topics: Reviews , Entertainment, Movies, David Letterman,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
More Information
ARTICLES BY PETER KEOUGH
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BUFFET DINING: THE 15TH BOSTON UNDERGROUND FILM FESTIVAL  |  March 19, 2013
    "Copraphagy" is a key word at this year's Boston Underground Film Festival at the Brattle.
  •   REVIEW: GINGER & ROSA  |  March 19, 2013
    Sally Potter likes to mess around with form and narrative.
  •   UNDERGROUND CINEMA: THE 12TH BOSTON TURKISH FILM FESTIVAL  |  March 12, 2013
    This year's Boston Turkish Film Festival includes works in which directors ponder the relationships between the secular and the religious, between men and women, and between destiny and identity.
  •   REVIEW: A GLIMPSE INSIDE THE MIND OF CHARLES SWAN III  |  March 12, 2013
    In Roman Coppola's sophomoric second feature (his 2001 debut CQ was promising), Charlie Sheen shows restraint as the titular asshole, a dissolute ad designer and solipsistic whiner who's mooning over the loss of his latest love.
  •   REVIEW: UPSIDE DOWN  |  March 14, 2013
    Had Ed Wood Jr. directed Fritz Lang's Metropolis , he couldn't have achieved the earnest dopiness of Juan Solanas's sci-fi allegory — nor the striking images.

 See all articles by: PETER KEOUGH