Plump fiction
Quentin Tarantino gets off color in Jackie Brown
by Peter Keough
JACKIE BROWN, Directed and written by Quentin Tarantino; based on the novel Rum
Punch, by Elmore Leonard. With Pam Grier, Samuel L. Jackson, Robert
Forster, Robert De Niro, Bridget Fonda, Michael Keaton, Michael Bowen, and
Chris Tucker. A Miramax Films release.
As enjoyable as most of this movie is, you have to consider that it
takes about as long to watch Quentin Tarantino's two-and-a-half-hour Jackie
Brown as it does to read the Elmore Leonard novel, Rum Punch, on
which it's based. After the two years following his sensational Pulp
Fiction, during which some wondered whether the auteur wunderkind
was indeed a one-trick pony, Tarantino has returned with a film that
eschews flash and emphasizes acting, dialogue, character, and atmosphere. The
in-your-face shock values are minimized, the deft toying with narrative and
other cinematic conventions is lacking, the rollicking play with the debris of
pop culture is subdued. Tarantino seems relaxed, confident, unconcerned about
taking his time. In short, compared with the pyrotechnics of its predecessor,
Jackie Brown is a little slow, but sure.
Although he's reduced the pace, Tarantino is still strolling over the same
terrain. Jackie Brown (Pam Grier), née Burke in the Leonard original and a
blonde Caucasian, is a down-on-her-luck stewardess for a backwater airline
who's first seen in a long tracking shot as she rides down a people mover. In
her flight bag she's carrying $50,000 to deliver to gun runner Ordell Robbie
(Samuel L. Jackson, trading in his Jheri curls for a ponytail and setting a new
record for saying the word "nigger") from his secret cache in Mexico. She's
arrested by Ray Nicolette (Michael Keaton) and Mark Dargus (Michael Bowen), two
cops staking her out, and offered a choice: turn Robbie in or do hard time.
It's not much of a choice. In a masterful sequence in which Tarantino augments
his trademark black-comic touch with violence with newfound subtlety and
indirection, Robbie is shown dealing with another associate in a similar
position. Whether she cooperates with the authorities or not, Brown's prospects
are bleak -- at best she faces prison time, the loss of her job, and the
unenviable position of being a 46-year-old African-American woman starting over
again on the bottom.
As with Bruce Willis's palooka in Pulp, however, such adversity proves
a character builder. With the unlikely assistance of Max Cherry (former
Banyon and Medium Cool star Robert Forster, turning in a
touching, nuanced, career-restoring performance), the straight-arrow bail
bondsman who springs her, she slyly and courageously plots to turn the
tables.
The mechanics of her scheme are convoluted and unfold with clarity and care
(maybe too much care -- in a nod perhaps to the narrative shenanigans of
Pulp, Tarantino runs through a climactic money exchange three times from
different angles). The details, though, are secondary to the character arcs and
the side patter. Starting out seemingly fragile and defeated, Grier's Brown
regroups and slowly recaptures the bravura and the fire of her hardboiled
heroines in such '70s blaxploitation classics as Coffy and Foxy
Brown. Forster's Cherry, too, begins inauspiciously as a square but decent
loser; when he starts to fall for Brown, his pathos melts into canny resolve.
Even the minor characters have their surprises. In one of his best
performances in some time, Robert De Niro plays Robbie's stooge Louis, an
ex-con with neither the nerve to make anything out of his criminality nor the
will power to end it. He serves mostly as straightman to Robbie's outlandish,
hilarious ravings and unenthusiastic accomplice to his capers, but under the
unassuming, ill-clad exterior there lurks something akin to Travis Bickle. And
as Melanie, one of Robbie's trio of ill-matched girlfriends, Bridget Fonda
ranges from dope-induced stupor to snarling, backstabbing bitchiness while
still finding time to engage De Niro in one of the briefest, least romantic
love scenes in cinema history.
Only Jackson's Ordell remains unchanged and unrepentant. Unlike his hitman in
Pulp, Jackson here is having too much fun being a bad-ass,
jive-talking motherfucker to think much about redemption. In scenes in which he
provides the commentary for his sales video "Babes with Guns" or discusses with
a colleague the propriety of getting into the trunk of a car with a shotgun, he
embodies Tarantino at the director's most exuberant and inspired. Some might
find the recurrent and lengthy shots of Torrance, California, a little lulling
-- even with '70s soul greats like the Delfonics playing on the radio.
Easygoing though it might be for the most part, however, Jackie Brown
shows steady progress in the maturing of one of America's great filmmakers.