Auto
Focus
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 22 November 2002
Kooky
Paul Schrader's
Auto Focus is, as its title suggests, about self-interest and
-obsession. Its means to these themes is the sad, absurd, short life
of Bob Crane (Greg Kinnear), the guy who played Colonel Hogan in the
World War II POW sitcom, Hogan's Heroes (on CBS from
1965-'71). Odd and regrettable as it was, the series had noting on
its star's life story. Crane's off-TV career ran something of a
gamut, from pornographic to preposterous. Making his way from a
working class background to minor celebrity and seeming suburban
bliss, he was eventually, irrevocably entangled in his own desire,
his self-absorption and self-delusion.
Bob Crane met a
brutal end: he was bludgeoned to death in his Phoenix, Arizona condo
in 1978. This instrument is at once telling, ludicrous, and
pathetic: he was murdered with one of the tripods he used to make
sex tapes.
Indeed,
following the killing, a blood-lusting press dug all the dirt it
might have desired: Crane was a sex addict, amassing thousands of
photographs and tapes, many created in league with his buddy John
Carpenter (played here by Schrader regular Willem Dafoe), a
conniving hanger-on once employed by Sony (which gave him access to
emerging recording technologies) who was, some years later, tried
and acquitted of Crane's brutal murder.
Recently, and
no doubt egged on by the film's promoters, diverse media have taken
up Crane's story. The ex-wives, Anne and Patti, have appeared on TV,
extolling their beloved Bob's big heart (each remembering him as
hers). E! True Hollywood Story aired an episode this past
weekend, with emphasis on the John Carpenter trial and the lingering
pathos and mystery. And in late September, the New York Times
Magazine ran an article by Lynn Hirschberg (perhaps most famous
for writing the Courtney-Love-did-heroin-while-pregnant story that
so enraged the ailing Kurt Cobain), which details some of the
fallout from Crane's excesses: the unhappy marriages, that Bobby,
fifty-one, his son from his first marriage to high school sweetheart
Anne, served as consultant for the movie; another son, Scotty,
thirty-one, is publicly disparaging Schrader's version of his dad;
he also maintains a website featuring his father's sex tapes.
Kooky.
Schrader's
version of Bob Crane, based on Michael Gerbosi's script, adapted
from Robert Graysmith's book The Murder of Bob Crane, is less
particular, less passionate, and probably less moralistic than these
others. Schrader's Crane is a victim of his own weaknesses,
succumbing to the Hollywood-induced fiction that you can be who you
want to be. Hardly transgressive, Crane's sordid silliness provides
another occasion for the filmmaker to detail the duplicities and
repressions of U.S. consumer culture. Believing that his celebrity,
however paltry or fleeting, allows him access to fulfillment of all
desire, Crane avidly pursues his whimsy, with no apparent
understanding of its shallowness. (Or, alternatively, he's so
painfully self-aware of his absurdity that he bends to it, seeking
self-destruction.)
For all its
dedication to showing Bob's excesses and misapprehensions, the film
opens with credits, under Angelo Badalamenti's slick-jazzy score,
that posit a peculiar distance from its subject. Martini glasses,
bikinis and cigarette holders, Hugh Hefner and Polaroid cameras: the
images designate an era, a place, a sense of insularity, ease, and
privilege. And so: L.A, mythic land of pretty surfaces and preening
affects. At the beginning of Auto Focus, In 1964, Bob is
working as a radio DJ and amateur drummer. He's in a booth, hamming
it up like he's a star already, cajoling his guest, the Lone Ranger
Clayton Moore, slapping his cymbal to transition to commercial. Bob
has an affable charm, but he's lightweight in every way, including
his already visible lack of self-knowledge. "I'm a likeable guy," he
tells his agent Lenny (Ron Leibman), "I need something big. I can be
Jack Lemmon." You get the feeling that he knows his type, but has no
notion of his limits.
Lenny comes up
with a gig, and no one can anticipate just how big it will be.
Hogan's Heroes, a Holocaust comedy, looks like a terrible idea,
and the network works overtime to preclude offense, inviting press
to visit with the players, emphasizing their good intentions, their
sweetness and "likeability." Bob is the ostensibly perfect
interview, prepared, pleasant, and ostensibly impermeable.
The front
becomes obsessive and thematic: Bob's performance continues on and
offscreen. When his wife Anne (Rita Wilson) finds a stack of what
she calls "shady magazines" hidden in a drawer (Nature Girls 1965),
she's furious: "No wonder you never look at me anymore!" Bob hangs
his head and acts like he's sheepish and sorry, but he's entered
into a world, within himself, from which he will not emerge.
He's encouraged
on this journey by Carp, cunning and conniving and terminally
obtuse. Coming on like he's a fan of the TV show, Carp offers Bob a
way to make his own "shady" images, via video tape. "I'm sort of
freelance," says Carp, selling himself as much as he's selling any
products for Sony. He takes Bob on a date, to a strip club, and here
Bob finds his apparent calling: he sits in on drums during the
girls' dances. John arranges for double dates at his home, premised
on girls wanting to party with Celebrity Bob, and before long, Bob
is sliding down his own very slippery slope. He leaves Anne for his
Hogan's costar Patti (Maria Bello), who agrees, initially, to
go along with his "open marriage" policy.
All this
activity is too much for any one man to manage. Increasingly, Bob
can't keep track of differences between his fantasy life and his
real life, and his multiple roles begin to collapse. His loss of
self (and self-control) is particularly evident in the film's set
piece, Bob's hallucinatory near-breakdown on the Hogan's set:
the lights turn salacious red, Bob and Helga (Patti's character) get
busy on Colonel Klink's desk, and soon enough, Klink (Werner
Klemperer, played by Kurt Fuller) joins in. Horrified that he's so
out of control, Bob thinks -- for a minute -- that he might need to
cut back. But his addiction is his life; he has no choice, and finds
ways to justify and make sense of his excesses. Sex is "natural," he
tells Lenny.
At the same
time, Bob has some dim sense that his behavior is not quite
"normal." But he can, conveniently, project any "depravity" onto
Carp. As Auto Focus has it, Bob's pathology is of a piece
with Carp's vulgar encouragement, desperate solicitousness, and most
especially, the technology they use to document their exploits. As
Carp keeps coming with new and improved equipment, cameras,
monitors, and tripods, the pornography becomes a kind of end in
itself: they watch it together, jerking off in tandem. When, at one
point, Bob sees John's hand on him in one sex tape, he has a brief
moment of anxiety: "What the hell is that on my ass!?" John
apologizes, promises never to do it again: they're no perverts,
after all.
It's this
absolute inability to see themselves that most clearly indicts Bob
and John. Not as perverts per se, but as products of a culture
premised on consumption and illusion, endless need and promise. They
can't ever get enough, they can't ever see an end. They feed one
another's desire, but can't admit to their intimacy. They're
miserably, incessantly horny, never satisfied, partners in longing
and fear: what if they are so small, so unsatisfied, so pathetic as
they feel?
At the same
time, of course, Bob and John see themselves relentlessly and
explicitly, engaged in all manners of sexual behavior on camera. The
camera -- the focus -- defines Bob, as Hogan, as interview subject,
as sexual entity. At one point, when he's now the ex-star of a
cancelled sitcom, Bob is desperate to pick up some girls in a bar,
and so asks the bartender to change the channel to a station showing
Hogan's reruns, so he can pose nearby and then act as though
he's so surprised that anyone would recognize him. Bob may have lost
himself, but he preserves himself as well, in that TV image.
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Written and
Directed
by:
Paul Schrader
Starring:
Greg Kinnear
Willem Dafoe
Maria Bello
Rita Wilson
Ron Leibman
Written by:
Michael Gerbosi
Rating:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
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