The
Distinguished Gentleman
New York Newsday
Part II Section, pg. 74
Friday, December 4th, 1992
"Con Man Saves His Soul In Congress"
By Jack Mathews
"The Distinguished Gentleman" (R) his best performance
since the first "Beverly Hills Cop," Eddie Murphy plays
a Florida con man who runs for Congress and wins a conscience. With
Sheryl Lee Ralph, Lane Smith, Victoria Rowell.
This is not the kind of compliment Eddie Murphy is apt to appreciate,
but in watching him in "The Distinguished Gentleman,"
I was reminded immediately how much fun he can be when he is merely
performing, when his great comic gifts are not subordinate to his
destructive ego.
Virtually every film where Murphy has had complete creative control
has been a creative monstrosity, beginning with "The Golden
Child" in 1986 and ending with this past summer's "Boomerang."
Murphy may be heading back down that road, having renewed his long-term
pact with Paramount, but "The Distinguished Gentleman,"
made or Disney's Hollywood Pictures division, offers a refreshing
break, for us, if not for him.
"The Distinguished Gentleman," directed by "My Cousin
Vinny's" talented Jonathan Lynn, is high-concept filmmaking
at its unapologetic best. Just as they did with "Sister Act,"
sending Whoopi Goldberg undercover in a convent, the Disney folks
found the perfect comic setup for Murphy, sending him to Washington
as a con man-turned-congressman out to fleece a system more corrupt
than he is.
Screenwriter Marty Kaplan, former speechwriter for Walter Mondale,
knows the territory, and though the story is too silly to qualify
as political satire or to warrant the hefty sentimentality in the
late stages, he offers a few wry insights into the world of perks
and PACs. Learning the facts of Washington life from mercenary lobbyist
Terry Corrigan (Kevin McCarthy), Murphy's freshman Congressman,
Thomas Jefferson Johnson realizes that every vote is potential boondoggle.
Legalized grand larceny.
On a bill to limit awards in malpractice suits, it doesn't matter
which way he votes.
"If you're for it, I can get you money from the doctors and
the insurance companies," Corrigan says. "If you're against
it, I can get you money from the trial lawyers."
"If that's true," Johnson asks, "how does anything
get done?"
"It doesn't," Corrigan says, "that's the beauty of
the system."
Johnson, elected on a name-recognition fluke (he has the same name
as his venerable predecessor, who died astride his administrative
assistant), bungles a few early opportunities out of ignorance,
but he proves to be a quick study. Told that the big money goes
to those sitting on important committees, he finagles his way onto
the Power and Industry Committee by convincing its corrupt chairman
Dick Dodge (Lane Smith) that the country's minority action groups
are mobilizing to protest that powerful body's lack of ethnic mix.
The assignment is a mother lode of potential payoffs for Johnson,
but being Dodge's lackey is an ugly way to get rich, and the hustler
begins to feel the first nudges of a growing conscience.
Kaplan has referred to "Gentleman" as the flipside of
Voltaire's "Candide," where an idealist is made cynical
by the harsh realities of life, and it is clear from the moment
Johnson meets ardent environmental activist Celia Kirby (Victoria
Rowell) that his consciousness will raised through romance.
The movie "Gentleman" seems most inspired by, however,
is Frank Capra's "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," particularly
the climatic speech in which James Stewart shames a corrupt senior
senator into acts of contrition and suicide. The final comeuppance
of Lane Smith's smarmy Dick Dodge isn't quite that melodramatic,
but it's to relish nonetheless, as is Murphy's marvelous comic mugging
throughout.
This is easily Murphy's best comic performance since the first "Beverly
Hills Cop." It's his most structured script, and at times that
may limit him more than his most avid fans would like. Also, as
good as he is at parodying the political scene, Kaplan has no feel
for screen romance; there isn't a believable moment to the relationship
between Murphy and Kirby.
Given the galumphing awkwardness of Murphy's recent pictures, the
flaws and flats spots here are hardly worth mentioning. The deft
timing of Lynn's direction moves the story along so quickly you
don't have time to ponder the implausibilities, and he got such
funny performances from Sheryl Lee Ralph, as Johnson's cousin and
crony; Noble Willingham, as an insurance czar with an appetite for
telephone sex, and Lane Smith (whose portrayal of Richard Nixon
in the mini-series "Final Days' gave him a leg up on sleaze)
that Murphy isn't required to carry the movie alone.
Disney's formula of squeezing expansive comic stars into controlled
vehicles may not produce any classics, but in the case of "Sister
Act" this summer, and "The Distinguished Gentleman"
this Christmas, it has produced some reliable and big laughs. We'll
take 'em.
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Photos from
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| Feature Articles |
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"Yes,
Director": After Skewering the British Government on
the BBC, Writer/Director Jonathan Lynn Takes a Swipe at Capitol
Hill
by David Hunter
(Village View, Dec. 4 - 10, 1992)
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| Reviews |
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"Mr. Murphy
Goes to Washington: Eddie Murphy and Co. Turn In a Distinguished
Political Sendup"
by David Hunter
(Village View)
"'Mr.
Murphy Goes to Washington': When showcasing his comic gifts,
Eddie Murphy turns his latest film into the funniest one he's
made in a long time"
by Kenneth Turan
(Los Angeles Times, December 4, 1992)
"Con Man Saves His Soul In Congress"
by Jack Mathews
(New York Newsday, Part II Section, pg. 74, Friday, December
4th, 1992)
"Murphy
Goes from Con Artist to Congress"
by Vincent Canby
(New Yorks Times, December 4, 1992)
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