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Maxie
(1985)
Director: Paul Aaron
Cast: Glenn Close, Mandy Patinkin, Ruth Gordon
There are certain things that get into your
head when you are a child, but that you
eventually let go of. When I was a small child,
I used to believe in Santa Claus. But as the
years went by and I experienced reality, all the
magical things about Saint Nick got to be more
and more improbable, and I eventually let go of
the entire idea. I also used to believe in the
Loch Ness Monster. But I eventually realized
that the idea of a giant monster managing to
escape close scientific investigation year after
year in such a relatively small area of
existence had to be impossible. But there are
also a number of things that first got into my
head as a child that have stuck there all of
these years later. One of them is the idea of
the afterlife, an idea that includes such things
as a place where the dead go after they die in
this world, and also the idea of ghosts and
spirits. I think I have mentioned earlier one of
the main reasons why I believe there is such a
thing as the afterlife. If you have forgotten,
the reason is that during all of my thinking
over the years about the possibility of the
afterlife, I haven't been able to imagine myself
to not exist at all in some form or another.
Being totally wiped out at the point of death? I
can't imagine it. I admit that I can't fully
explain why I can't think of how my existence
came out of nowhere, though one possible
explanation is reincarnation. I actually had the
chance to meet a psychic once (for free, let me
assure you), and she told me that I had a past
life. She also told me upon examining me that in
one of my past lives I had been killed with an
axe to my back.
I didn't know what to think about that
supposed revelation when I heard it. I have to
admit that to this day I don't really like to
think about it, and my train of thought goes on
to other topics. Topics like the one I am going
on to next, in order to get my supposed
past-life murder out of my mind. Anyway, besides
a spirit world, I also got into my head as a
child the idea that everyone wants to make some
sort of impact on the world, an impact that will
make them kind of immortal to generations to
come. I think I first learned this with a Dave
Berg cartoon. It started off with a boy writing
his name ("Roger Kaputnik", of course) endless
times on a building. When another boy asked him
why he was doing this, Roger answered him by
saying, "For immortality! When I am long gone,
the world will know that there was a Roger
Kaputnik!" But the punchline of this cartoon (heh
heh) in the last panel of the cartoon was that
(chuckle) a sign on the top of the building
announced that the building was being torn
down for urban development! (Oh Dave Berg,
your sense of humor will never get old!) Okay,
it was a pretty bad cartoon, but I found out
during the subsequent years that passed, that I
too had some kind of desire to be immortal and
be known long past my death. Twice when my
father did some concrete construction on our
property, I got his permission to scratch my
initials and the date in part of the cement that
he laid down. And when we constructed a new
bathroom in the basement of our house, I slipped
a note in the wall of the bathroom before it was
fully sealed.
I think I can put those two topics that I
wrote about in the above two paragraphs
together, for several reasons. People who have
become immortal with the various works that they
do during their lives do haunt us, in some sort
of way, to this day when they have died long
ago. And people (who are now spirits) may have
such an urge to exist that they may exit their
new spirit world and appear in our "normal"
world. There is a third reason why I can put
these two topics together, and you have probably
guessed it by now - that the movie I am
reviewing here, Maxie, mixes these
two topics. You might expect that a movie mixing
those two aforementioned topics might be fairly
serious in tone, and if you would ask me, that
would be how I would like to see those topics in
a movie. Instead, Maxie takes a
light-hearted look at those topics. Still, I was
prepared to give the movie a chance - I've been
pleasantly surprised before by movies that
decided to go in a direction that I thought
wouldn't work. The setting of Maxie
is modern-day San Francisco, focusing on married
couple Jan (Close, Fatal Attraction)
and Nick (Patinkin, Alien Nation).
Peeling off the wallpaper in their apartment
while renovating, they find a message written on
the wall from 1927, signed by a Maxie Malone.
They find out from their landlady that Maxie, an
up-and-coming actress who appeared in a silent
movie, used to live in their apartment and died
at a young age. Intrigued, Jan and Nick get a
copy of the movie and watch it in their
apartment. This act apparently shakes the
cosmos, since Maxie appears as a ghost not long
afterwards, and then takes possession of Jan's
body. Maxie is back, and she's got big plans!
I mentioned in the last paragraph that though
I wanted to see a serious movie both about
ghosts and the examination of wanting to make an
impact on the world that would make you
immortal, I was willing to give a comic look at
these subjects a chance. Maybe it was partly due
to these deep down feelings of mine, but I
actually found that the parts of Maxie
that worked were the few parts of the movie that
took things seriously. The early part of the
movie before Maxie's resurrection intrigued me.
When the message on the wall was revealed, I was
curious - just who was Maxie Malone and why did
she feel like she had to leave such a giant
message? The next part of the movie, when Nick
and Jan dig up information about Maxie and find
out more about her, was also interesting, kind
of like the satisfying feeling you get when a
movie detective uncovers clues. After Maxie is
resurrected and occupies Jan's body whenever she
seems to feel like it, there are a couple of
other serious scenes I thought were handled
well. There's one touching scene when Maxie
spots Nick and Jan's landlady (Gordon,
Where's Poppa?) - who used to be a close
friend of Maxie's years earlier - and slowly
reveals to her friend that she has returned,
which totally stuns her still-living friend. Not
long afterwards, there is a scene when Maxie has
temporarily left Jan's body, and Jan finds out
what Maxie has been doing with her husband. She
is hurt, of course, and demands to know how Nick
could have been lead astray from this other
woman. Both of these scenes are real and
convincing.
Unfortunately, even though the movie has
those scenes, it doesn't seem to have been very
inspired to do much with them subsequently,
comic or otherwise. Take the character of the
landlady, for example. You might think that
after she finds out that Maxie is back, there
would be later in the movie scenes of the two
friends doing, well, something together.
But if I recall correctly, the landlady only
subsequently appears in only one other scene for
just a few seconds (and Maxie is not present in
that scene.) In fact, when it comes to the other
material in the movie - the stuff that is
intended to be light-hearted - the movie blows
these opportunities as well. When Jan attends a
party full of high society types and Maxie gets
in control, all that the screenplay can think of
having her do is pour a drink down a woman's
dress and then sing "Bye Bye Blackbird" to the
crowd. When it finally dawns on Jan's boss, a
Catholic bishop, that his secretary is more or
less possessed, there are rumblings from him
that he's planning an exorcism. But the movie
not only never gets to that stage, it in fact
drops this character from the movie entirely
after this point. Most disappointingly is when
Maxie gets the idea to make a Hollywood comeback
while in Jan's body. The idea of someone with a
'20s attitude trying to break into modern-day
Hollywood has a lot of potential for humor, but
the movie blows it. We never see how Maxie
succeeds in her audition, for one thing, and
when the movie brings in celebrities Harry
Hamlin and Leeza Gibbons (playing themselves),
there is absolutely no attempt to do anything
funny with them.
In fact, the whole Hollywood part of the
movie is kind of insulting to the audience.
Maxie tries to convince its audience
with stuff like someone without an agent or any
experience in any kind of "talkies" could land
an audition for a speaking part in a commercial
(and get the part), then could then land almost
immediately afterwards a leading part in a big
budget motion picture, and that there are no
rehearsals when production of a motion picture
begins. In fact, the movie's attitude to some
other things is just as insulting. This attitude
starts around the time that Maxie first appears
as a ghost in front of Nick. Nick's attitude to
seeing a ghost is unbelievably bland. The scene
could have been funny or spooky, but Nick treats
the episode almost like it's a minor
inconvenience. It doesn't help that Patinkin's
performance here and elsewhere in the movie is
just as bland. He plays his character as such a
wimp that I actually grew angry at this
character. As for Close, she is neither
compelling as Jan or Maxie, though at least I
wasn't annoyed at her performance. Maxie
is a failed comedy, but I am glad that I did see
it for one reason. You know how in movies and TV
shows, when someone presses play on a video
recorder at home, that there is always no audio
and a blank screen on the TV before the video
starts up? Well, in Maxie, the
home video recorder here is just like real life
- a TV show is playing on Jan and Nick's TV just
before they press play to watch the silent movie
video they have brought home. I have been
waiting to see that in a movie for many years.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
Check for availability on Amazon for source
novel "Marion's Wall"
See also: Prison,
Real Men,
Slaughterhouse Rock
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