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Free Money
(1998)
Director: Yves Simoneau
Cast: Marlon Brando, Charlie Sheen, Thomas Haden Church
There are bad movies that are made that start off with genuinely good ideas
and good intentions, but end up being bad despite the honest effort of everyone
involved for one reason or another. Then there are bad movies that are made with
a dubious premise, but you sense the sincerity of the talent in front of and
behind the camera, and you can understand why there were people who felt it
could work. After all, if you twist that premise around in your mind, you can
uncover a germ of an idea hidden in there somewhere. Then there are bad movies
that are simply so wrong in every possible aspect, including those that
would have been immediately evident during the filming, that you are simply
stunned by the fact that there was apparently nobody around during the
production who took even a glimpse of what was happening and observed that there
was something very seriously wrong going on here. Then there are bad movies like
the Canadian Free Money, a movie so bad and so wrong-headed in every way
possible that I think it manages to sink even lower than that rock-bottom level
I described in the previous sentence. It is a true disaster, one that not only
stuns you with its utter badness, but that it managed to gather together so much
professional talent willing to work on it, none of whom at any point seemed to
see anything wrong. The only time sanity seems to have brushed by this movie was
when it was shopped around to various North American theatrical distributors.
Wisely, none of them would touch the movie, resulting in it subsequently being
quietly dumped on the video market. It is perhaps appropriate that such an
utterly moronic comedy should take place in and
with the inhabitants of Hicksville. This
particular backwater's biggest feature is its
maximum security prison, run by
"The Swede" (Brando),
a rough and gruff warden who likes to get his
laughs by hunting down escaped convicts and
shooting them point blank range in the back of
their necks. So it's not a surprise he explodes
when his twin high school daughters announce to
him that they are both pregnant from the two
utter losers they've been dating, Bud (Sheen)
and Larry (Church). Actually, one of the girls
at this point -
or is it both of them? - actually isn't
pregnant, in a subplot that goes absolutely
nowhere, but it doesn't seem to ever matter to
The Swede one way or another in the end. Not only does he
force Bud and Larry to marry his daughters, but
he quickly starts making his new son-in-laws'
lives a living hell when a number of
circumstances soon have the two couples living
with The Swede under his roof, placing exceeding
rules and chores onto them. And if they should
fail to satisfy him, The Swede has them bend
over and applies a phallic-shaped electric
cattle prod on their behinds. Desperate times
call for desperate measures, so Bud and Larry
soon hatch a wild scheme to get them the title
stuff so they can escape from their hellish
lives: They will hijack and rob the train from
Canada that passes through their community once
a year when shipping back worn-out American
currency to the U.S. Mint. As you've probably
guessed with all these wacky characters running
around, no part of the scheme goes well for
anyone it touches directly or indirectly.
Free Money goes wrong in every way
possible that it's difficult to know where to
start in detailing its problems. Since "actors"
starts with an A, and "characters" is only a
little further down that alphabetical list, I
might as well start at those points. It's kind
of a moot point to criticize Charlie Sheen (who
bills himself here as Charles Sheen) when
you consider his resume is full of mediocre past
performances, I know, but all the same he
definitely deserves some black marks here. For
one thing, there is no real sign that he is
trying to give more than the bare minimum that
will give him his paycheck. He is visibly tired
and utterly bewildered, never going to the
trouble to put any effort into giving a personal
touch to anything he says or does, which might
have helped develop his character even just a
little. However, Sheen's confusion and lack
of effort is understandable under the
circumstances, because the movie gives him
nothing to work with. He's not even
introduced until the actual wedding ceremony. We
never learn anything about this character other
than he has the basic human desires of wanting
good sex and living in a paradise with a lot of
money. All of this is the same with the
character that Thomas Hayden Church (who?)
plays, though Church manages to comes across
even worse than Sheen. While Sheen walks through
in a quiet daze, Church seems to be inspired by
his internal confusion and makes his character a
whiney and blubbering wimp. If his character had
shown the least bit of backbone and effort in
trying to help himself, his reactions to his
predicaments might have been funny. Instead, it
is infuriating to endlessly sit through the
whimpers of a wimp who can't do anything for
himself. It's the kind of character who can only
become more likable should you apply a
two-by-four to his head. It goes without saying
that you can forget about any possible chemistry
occurring with Sheen and Church being put
together at any particular moment. You don't get
the sense that they are really seeing and
acknowledging the other; it's almost as if each
of them was filmed separately (and in different
galaxies) and both reels of footage were pasted
together. There's an air around these guys
that's both bizarre and artificial, and it's
nothing that we can relate to. Sheen and
Church are not the only actors who are saddled
with characters that don't make a whole lot of
sense. Mira Sorvino, continuing her decline
(that previously included
New York Cop)
after winning an Oscar just a few years earlier,
is totally miscast as an FBI agent who starts
snooping around after the train
robbery.
Her character totally lacks the coolness and
professional thoroughness real life agents have.
Though I know the movie is supposed to be a
comedy, her attitude is just so unbelievable
that it becomes exasperating instead of amusing.
In fairness to her, she is working with a very
badly written character, one that not only has
no real influence on the events in the end, but
has the beginnings of a subplot (she ran away
from town years ago, and now has returned to her
estranged father) than is abandoned almost as
soon as it's introduced. Despite the fact that
prominent actor Donald Sutherland plays that
father, a judge who happens to be the confident
of The Swede as well, his role turns out to be
even more useless, and all he ends up doing is
dropping in on occasion to say or do something
of little significance that could easily be
written out or given to somebody else. In fact,
all of his screen time combined takes up less
than five minutes. Aside from possibly an effort
to have another well-known star in the movie,
there's only one possible explanation Sutherland
seems to be here; knowing the bizarre rules the
Canadian government has for a film to be
considered "Canadian", the production needed a
Canadian star to be the first or second highest
paid actor. So they hired him for two days work
at the most, but paid him enough to make him the
highest paid cast member apart from Brando.
And Brando... well, you can't really say that
the mighty have fallen in a case like this,
because even at his age Brando still has the
clout to find himself a good project should he
want to. He chose this project over everything
else he was undoubtedly offered, a disturbing
thing to think of. What's even more disturbing
is that Brando was reportedly given free reign
in Free Money to go any which way
he wanted, and the results speak for themselves.
With a partially shaved head of hair dyed red
(and with the words JESUS SAVES tattooed on his
bald spot) and a big bushy moustache, he is not
only unrecognizable, but looks so grotesque that
he looks ill instead of goofy-looking. Maybe he
was ill during the production, which might
explain why he's seen sitting down in almost
every scene and why his speech is so slurry you
can't understand what he's saying about half of
the time. Apparently forgetting that he's funny
when spoofing his great image (like in The
Freshman), Brando instead goes for a
more blatant slapstick performance, uttering
threats like "I'll tear your nuts off and sew
them in your mouth!", falling down in a faint
and landing on the ground with a big thud, and
in the worst bit, falling head-first into a
toilet bowl and getting his head stuck. Must
I mention that simple-minded gags such of these
are not funny, as well as being so tired and
familiar? I will admit that Brando's style of
humor is no better or worse than any of the
other attempts in Free Money.
Actually, maybe in one aspect it's better,
because in much of the movie there isn't any
attempt at humor. There are many times when
the movie forgets it's a
comedy,
and essentially just seems to be about Bud and
Larry finding their lives becoming genuinely
crappier and crappier. Even though we couldn't
care less about these losers, these parts do put
a sour mood over the entire movie. Then there
are moments that are extremely questionable to
ever appear in a comedy. Maybe there are a few
people out there who find such topics as
miscarriage, bloody prison fist-fights, and
people getting bloody gun wounds (some of which
being the fatal kind) funny to the point of
tears, but I don't personally know anybody who
does. All this is no funnier than the actual
attempts at humor. I realize everyone has a
unique sense of humor, but I really don't think
anyone of reasonable intelligence will find a
car stuck in mud hilarious, or hillbilly music
being played during a car chase. Nor will they
find anything clever or original elsewhere. One
part of the movie has The Swede getting the
prized truck he's been scrimping and saving up
for many years, and the truck ends up... Failed
movie gags seldom get more unclever and
unoriginal as that. Free Money
had quite a substantial budget ($30 million),
but even if you consider Brando's salary took up
a fair portion of that, the movie sure doesn't
look like that amount was spent on it. In fact,
the movie has the look of a typical cheaply-made
episode of a Canadian prime-time dramatic
series. To put it another way, this is one of
the ugliest-looking movies I've seen in quite a
while. French-Canadian director Simoneau puts a
curious retro feel to the sets and costumes,
which seem right out of the '50s and '60s,
jarring badly with the various modern references
that creep in. He also seems to have wanted the
visual look of the movie to bring out the color
of puce. I doubt if that color scheme was
unintentional, considering just how badly put
together the rest of the movie is. Scenes seem
to start in midstream, or end before they
seemingly should be finished, and there's at
least one instance where footage gets recycled.
It's just the capper to a movie gone completely
wrong, and you again have to wonder just what
everyone involved was thinking. Maybe they were
thinking that, unlike other Canadian
productions, they were making a real
movie. But this isn't real - it's
surreal.
UPDATE: Michael Prymula sent me this: "Your wondering
why this film is so inconsistent at times and
why Brando chose it? Well according to the DVD
commentary Brando didn't choose this project,
because Free Money was actually Brando's
project from the beginning. The director pretty
much did whatever Brando told him to do, he
rewrote significant portions of the script every
day to accommodate whatever new ideas Brando
came up with, that explains a lot about why the
film is so surreal and unfocused. Despite all
that though, I will admit to getting some
enjoyment from this film from the sheer
weirdness of it."
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
Check Amazon for Marlon Brando's
autobiography
See also: Find
The Lady, Heaven
Before I Die, The
In-Laws
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