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Pillow Talk
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It was only a decade ago
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that Stephen McCauley published his first novel, The Object
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of My
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Affection , and startled his readers by having his gay protagonist, George,
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move in with a flaky Brooklyn social worker, Nina, and agree to be a father to
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her unborn child. It wasn't that either of the two plot strands (the end of
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George's affair with a self-absorbed professor and start of another with a
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Vermont ex-hippie; Nina's decision not to marry the blowhard father of her
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baby) broke new ground, only that the mixture raised modern and entertaining
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questions: Why would this woman feel more comfortable raising a child with a
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homosexual man than with a heterosexual one? Could two adults who love each
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other but aren't in love with each other stay together under such
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sexless circumstances? Could the gay guy convert--and, if so, would the
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conversion take ? McCauley's writing is mild and rather shapeless, but he
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gropes honestly for some new design for living. He wins the reader over as much
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for what he doesn't do--take cheap shots at his characters--as for the breadth
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of his observations. The book is gratifyingly unslick.
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The film
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that Nicholas Hytner has directed (from a screenplay by the playwright Wendy
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Wasserstein) is slick, sweet, and disastrously unmoving--even people who live
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to cry at the movies will find themselves depressingly dry-eyed. Hytner, an
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Englishman who made his name in theater (his 1994 revival of Carousel at
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the Lincoln Center had real weight and scope), hasn't figured out how to create
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intimacy with his characters on-screen or how to direct his actors so they
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expose themselves in the myriad microscopic ways stage actors can't. Hytner
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doesn't overhype his images or call attention to his own directorial hand, as
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he did in The Madness of King George (1994) and The Crucible
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(1996). But the film is just as stagy and arm's-length. It's anyone's guess
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what The Object is supposed to be about.
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A big part of the problem is Jennifer Aniston, who plays
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Nina as if her confusion is a consequence less of so many modern splintered
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paradigms than of plain simple-mindedness. Aniston can pout, and let her eyes
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crinkle up in fatuous happiness, and look moistly maternal. But that's about
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it. When she tells George (Paul Rudd, directed to be dear) that the father of
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her child isn't "home" to her, that George is "home," and that they need to
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throw out the old ways and invent some new ones, the scene has no urgency; she
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could be talking about where to go for dinner. She isn't a phony--she doesn't
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risk enough to be phony. Actresses get attention for their hair when they don't
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draw you in with their features. To demonstrate their growing closeness, Hytner
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leads the pair through jazzy swing-dance montages, along with scenes in which
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they hit each other with pillows (a common cinematic sign of a couple's
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closeness but not necessarily accurate; as an experiment, I hit my wife with a
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pillow, and she threw me out of the room).
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People I respect were reduced
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to puddles by Wasserstein's The Heidi Chronicles , although I found it a
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collection of stereotypes. Still, her stereotypes (in that play) brood
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engagingly over whether their behavior is too stereotypical. For The Object
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of My Affection , she has invented an entirely new cast of supporting
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characters, but they add little that anyone other than a development executive
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could think this story needs. Allison Janney plays Nina's stepsister, whose
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husband (Alan Alda) is described, glibly, as the "most powerful literary agent
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in the world." These two are intended as a foil for the nonjudgmental main
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characters--the sort of fake liberals who proclaim tolerance out of one side of
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their mouths and issue snobbish put-downs of gays, blacks, and Brooklyn out of
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the other. Someone could write a monograph on the role of Brooklyn in movies:
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It would surely include this one, which ends with a liberal-utopian vision of
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biracial, bisexual unity in Park Slope. Wasserstein also brings in a weary,
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aging critic (Nigel Hawthorne) who can echo Nina's plight, watching the object
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of his own affection drift into the arms of a younger man and delivering
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elegant monologues on the subject.
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Elegant monologues don't help
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an audience bond with a movie, however. Compare The Object of My
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Affection with that grisly sitcom tearjerker As Good as It Gets , in
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which James L. Brooks manages to generate an emotionally compelling movie out
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of a situation that has nothing-- nada --to do with any reality I know of.
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Brooks doesn't worry much about composing a frame or giving you a sense of
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place; he came from television, made it big with a TV-style tearjerker
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( Terms of
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Endearment ), and knows how to pull you in whether you
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want to be pulled in or not. Detached ironists such as Hytner might pride
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themselves on not stooping as low, but sometimes it's the stoopers whom you
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want to take home for the night.
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