Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019)
Directed by Quentin
Tarantino
Columbia, 160
minutes, R (language, graphic violence, drugs, sexual references)
★★
Once Upon a Time in
Hollywood was the final chapter of Oscar-nominated Best Picture nominees I saw. Confession: I’ve
been bored with Quentin Tarantino’s hipster bad boy antics for quite some time.
He has a devoted coterie who will watch anything he does in the mistaken view
that by doing so they accrue cultural capital. It bears saying that Tarantino’s
alleged satirical use of violence just isn’t funny in a society as sanguinary as
that of the United States. Mainly, though, I think Tarantino is repeating
himself.
He is redundant two times over in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. There is again violence, plus Once
Upon a Time is another counterfactual movie along the lines of Inglorious Basterds [sic]. His latest
follows Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio), a former TV Western star, and his
longtime stunt man/personal gofer Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt). The year is 1969,
and it’s been a long time between gigs for both men–Dalton because Westerns
have gone out style and he’s sick of them anyhow, and Booth because of his
hair-trigger temper, a DUI conviction, and rumors that he killed his wife.
Cliff spends his days at Rick’s home assuaging the latter’s ego, watching old
shows with him, and smoking dope; at night he returns to his trailer and his
pit bull. Maybe if Rick could only meet his new neighbors, director Roman
Polanski (Rafaeลง Zawierucha)
and his starlet wife Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie), he could wrangle a movie role
and help Cliff as well.
Rick isn’t the trendy kind of guy Polanski would deign to
meet, though his fortune does shift. Rick is offered a part he’d rather not
take, a guest appearance in a new Western series. He struggles at first, but it
revives his career and even gets to make some “spaghetti Westerns” in Italy. In
the interim, Cliff is ogled by and eventually gives a ride to a hippie chick
calling herself “Pussycat” (Margaret Qually), who offers to fellate him, but
even he knows jailbait when he sees it. Cliff delivers her to Spahn Ranch,
whose owner George (Bruce Dern) was once a friend. Now the place is crawling
with hippies giving him the hairy eyeball, and one named “Squeaky” (Dakota
Fanning) goes ballistic when Rick insists on seeing George. For good measure,
Cliff beats the crap out of the guy who flattened his tires and forces him to
change them. Later we learn that the ranch is the crash pad of the Charles
Manson family.
Cliff blows his Hollywood comeback with his wise-guy
attitude and his beat-down of Bruce Lee, but he goes to Italy with Rick. After
six months, Rick acquires a glamorous Italian wife who doesn’t want Cliff
hanging around. So far, Tarantino’s film is, as they say, “loosely based” on a
lot of things that actually happened. Tarantino based Dalton on Steve McQueen
from an old Western titled Wanted Dead or
Alive, though McQueen wasn’t exactly washed up at the time; Dalton is more
properly viewed as a composite of numerous actors in 1950s’ Westerns. Booth is
patterned on Bert Reynolds’ double Hal Needham. Most of the TV shows, movie
titles, and people mentioned are also real.
At this point, Tarantino could have
made a paean to Hollywood in the 1960s or, alternatively, a refocused update of
The Day of the Locust. He also could
have fashioned a better version of the disappointing Helter Skelter. Instead he opts for a counterfactual descent into “ultra-violence”
in which Rick and Cliff turn Dirty Harry2 and save Sharon
Tate and her guests from Manson Family droogs. That’s it, folks—two and a half
hours of filler so Tarantino can have us contemplate a world in which Sharon
Tate lives and Squeaky Fromme gets blowtorched.
Don’t get me wrong. Charlie Manson
was evil and his followers seriously deluded. I would rather they had perished instead
of Tate. That’s not how it went down, and having her survive isn’t exactly in
the category of “What if JFK had lived?” Robbie is very good as Tate, and plays
her with airheaded starstruck wonderment. Pitt is strong (in several senses of
the word) as Cliff, and DiCaprio is Leo—accomplished, but a bit like latter
days Jack Nicholson in that we still see him and not his character. The film
also feels like an excuse for Tarantino to reward his rat pack with role crumbs.
The cast is way too big for secondary characters to have any depth, so we end
up people watching to catch glimpses of Lena Dunham, Maya Hawke, James Marsden,
Steve McQueen, Al Pacino, Luke Perry, Rumer Willis, and (literally) dozens of
others.
The ending of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is a big Nothing Burger. Is it
supposed to be commentary on the ultimate vacuity of Hollywood? Or is it that
Tarantino has everyone dressed up and provides no direction of where they are
supposed to go? Allow me to call Tarantino’s meta references and up the ante
with one of my own. If you want to see the ultimate in senseless violence that
actually has a point, check out the aforementioned droogs in A Clockwork Orange.
Rob Weir
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