Mad
City (1997)
Rated PG13
Starring: Dustin Hoffman, John Travolta,
and Alan Alda
Rating:

out
of

|
Dustin Hoffman sure has been in his share of stinkers lately. This movie
proceeded the rather poor Wag the Dog into, and out of, theaters late
last year. Trying, in a somewhat more controlled way than Wag the
Dog,
to be a film that teaches the audience that the media is bad and has too
much control over how things are perceived by the general public, Mad
City ultimately doesn't say much of anything. Max Brackett (Dustin Hoffman) is a TV reporter who's been demoted to
a small market station after an embarrassing incident occurred between
himself and Kevin Hollander (Alan Alda) on live TV. Brackett tries big-city
TV news tactics for a station that's just not ready for them. When he's
assigned to a fluff story at a local museum as punishment, Brackett finds
himself in the middle of a big-city type story anyway. Brackett is trapped
in a bathroom as a disgruntled museum security guard, Sam Baily (John
Travolta), confronts his former boss with a shotgun in an attempt get
his job back. Brackett scoops everyone as the situation boils over into
a hostage situation. When Brackett is discovered in the bathroom, he begins
to instruct Baily, who accidently shoots another security guard, about
how to handle things and possibly avoid a long jail sentence. The secret,
according to Brackett, is in how one handles the media.
And so begins the tale of Max and Sam as they negotiate with the outside
world and spin doctor Sam's attempt to get his job back into a national
obsession. The script, written by Eric Williams, from a story by Tom Matthews,
is geniunely smart in places. The problem is that the main characters
aren't particularly interesting or believable. The audience is asked to
sympathize with Baily, but he comes off like a Forrest Gump-like lunkhead,
who is nice to children and animals, but short-tempered and full of rage.
Max Brackett, I believe, is supposed to be viewed as a reporter with morals,
but he's too slick and slimy for that persona to take hold. The heart
of the movie is in the right place, but is too dependent on characters
that don't seem to uphold their own supposed beliefs.
While the movie tries to be likeable and fun, as well as thought provoking,
it manages only to be mildly entertaining and instantly forgettable. Just
like Wag the Dog, another media-oriented film, this movie fails because
it just isn't as effective as it could be.
Trivia: Mia
Kirshner, who plays Laurie, the intern, is also visible in The Crow:
City of Angels as Sarah. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |