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Thunderballs
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Early in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged
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Me , the stumpy, snaggletoothed British secret agent (Mike Myers) survives
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an assassination attempt by his new bride, Vanessa (Elizabeth Hurley), who
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turns out to have been a "fembot" programmed by his nemesis, Dr. Evil (also
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Myers), to blow up the couple's honeymoon suite after 15 rounds of zealous
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humping. Following a suitable period of mourning for his exploded mate (five
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seconds), Austin greets his restored bachelorhood with a frenzy of
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exhibitionism--romping nude through the lobby of his posh hotel, pointing out
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his privates to assorted female passers-by, and launching into a lengthy water
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ballet in the company of Esther Williams-style chorines. Watching this
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sequence, I thought of the late David Niven, who, during the 1974 Academy
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Awards ceremony, saw a streaker charge across the stage and brought the house
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down with an ad-lib about the fellow "showing off his shortcomings." Niven
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wouldn't get a laugh here: Myers has rendered himself invulnerable to the
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incinerating one-liners of prudes and sniggerers. Austin might be oblivious to
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his own ridiculousness, but Myers isn't. He has made Austin's "shortcomings"
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the man's strongest suit and the act of showing them off both smashingly funny
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and--yes--attractive. Forget about defeating Dr. Evil: Austin Powers represents
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the exuberant conquest of shame.
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The Spy Who Shagged
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Me is better than anyone dared hope: bigger, more inventive, and more
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frolicsome than its predecessor, with a grab bag of scatological gags that are
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almost as riotous when you think back on them. I'm laughing now: The movie
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gives infantilism a good name. Let me add that I wasn't a fan of the first
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installment, Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997), which
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tanked after a lively opening. It was rife with overextended jokes--and the
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strange thing was that the joke wasn't the joke, the joke was the overextension
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of the joke. The terrible, flaccid timing was what was supposed to be funny. I
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wondered: What does it say when a gifted performer such as Myers sets out to
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make a "bad" movie, the kind of cheeseball '60s Bond imitation that untalented
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people made by accident? But I underestimated Myers' connection to the
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material. As a youth, he evidently fantasized about living in London's
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"swinging" '60s, portrayed in movies as an era when ugly, posturing little guys
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could routinely make it with long-haired, short-skirted hippie chicks who'd
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dance ecstatically while the camera zooms in and out. TV shows like
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Laugh-In and movies like Casino Royale (1967) and In Like
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Flint (1967) must have got all mashed together in his wet dreams. His
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resulting alter ego, Austin Powers, is Man before the Fall--provided you see
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the Fall as the mid-'70s, when embarrassment returned to the culture with a
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vengeance.
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It helps that in The Spy Who Shagged Me , Dr. Evil
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has soared in stature, becoming nearly as heroic a throwback as Austin
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himself--the supervillain seeming far more vulnerable to the slings and arrows
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of ridicule than the superhero. The bald, curdle-faced pinky-sucker is still
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locked in excruciating combat with his teen-aged son, Scott Evil (Seth Green),
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who never misses a chance to jeer at his father's grandiosity, and who in turn
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is dismissed as "quasievil ... semievil." A partially successful cloning
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attempt by Dr. Evil's henchman, Number 2 (Robert Wagner), has produced a true
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heir: a one-eighth Dr. Evil replica (Verne J. Troyer) dubbed "Mini-Me" who's
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like a distillation of the archvillain's most feral impulses. This snarling
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munchkin gives the Dr. Evil scenes--which still run long--a blast of
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energy.
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Dr. Evil's subtext of
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sexual jealousy has become his motive. Covetous of Austin Powers' lack of
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inhibition, he contrives to go back in time--to 1969, when both he and Powers
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were cryogenically frozen--and steal the source of the secret agent's appeal:
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his life force, or "mojo." Mojo-less, Austin panics when the opportunity comes
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to shag CIA agent Felicity Shagwell (Heather Graham); mojo-laden, Dr. Evil
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leaps into bed with his heretofore lesbian henchwoman Frau Farbissina (Mindy
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Sterling) but, post-coitus, cannot maintain a guiltless hedonism: "It got
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weird, didn't it?" he murmurs.
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The director, Jay Roach, keeps the picture bumping along,
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refusing to give the gags more weight than they warrant. Actually, he rarely
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gives them any weight: The bad jokes don't fall flat so much as blow
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away like onion skins. The commercial tie-ins--for Starbucks, Virgin Atlantic
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Airlines, and Heineken--aren't as oppressive as one might fear, although
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Austin's AOL e-mail address is a cybernetic badge of uncool. You go to a movie
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like this for the cameos and in-jokes, for Tim Robbins popping up as a harried
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U.S. president or Burt Bacharach and Elvis Costello emerging to croon
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(beautifully) "What Do You Get When You Fall in Love?" In the credits, Rob
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Lowe's name is superimposed over Myers' bare butt. Willie Nelson and Woody
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Harrelson appear, largely because their first names are euphemisms for "penis."
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Now there's a riff on You Only Live Twice (1967), now a hyperbolic
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parody of Thunderball (1965), now a piece of lame slapstick involving an
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electrical swivel chair. Dr. Evil dispatches a new henchman, a 400-plus pound
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kilt-wearing Scotsman named Fat Bastard (also Myers) to poke a long needle into
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the frozen Austin's crotch. Later, Austin mistakenly pours himself a cup of
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"coffee" from a jar containing a Fat Bastard stool sample. There are also more
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sophisticated, interlocking parodies, as when grim-faced NORAD radar operators
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tune in Jerry Springer and find Seth and Dr. Evil in the middle of a
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show called "My Father Is Evil and Wants To Take Over the World"--a segment
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that degenerates into bleeping and fisticuffs when the archvillain rushes an
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indignant Klansman.
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No doubt, Heather Graham
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is one of prettiest women on Earth. Her face has the freshness of a
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junior-high-school yearbook photo--it might be the apotheosis of the
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junior-high-school yearbook photo--and there's more than a touch of Barbie in
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her long thighs and high bottom. She knows how to move and she's sweet and
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she's game. But, let's face it, she's a twittering blank--a bore. I miss the
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witty poise that Elizabeth Hurley brought to the first Austin Powers .
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More than that, I wish that Myers had it in him to cultivate his counterpart as
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a comic actress and then let her rip--an actress who could be nerdy and
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alluring at once, who'd have a comeback for, "I put the grrrrr in
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swinger, baby." I nominate Lisa Kudrow, but there are probably others. You just
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have to be brave enough to look. For all Myers' fearlessness, he has yet to
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prove his manhood by letting an equal into his bed.
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L imbo , the latest effort from John Sayles, strains
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to be a great movie, to the point where it breaks into two different
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movies--neither fully successful, but both with huge compensations. The first
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is a grimly sardonic portrait of Alaska as a kind of Third World melting
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pot--full of desperate poverty and crime and on the verge of a transition to a
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tourist-based economy in which the interior will be cleared of timber but an
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illusion of wildness maintained. Alaska, we're promised, will turn into a
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giant, neo-Disney theme park. The other story is the love affair between a
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luckless torch singer (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio) and a luckless ex-fisherman
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(David Strathairn), in which the two--through a series of melodramatic
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contrivances that testify to Sayles' lack of ingenuity as a storyteller--end up
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together with the singer's brilliant, desperately unhappy daughter (Vanessa
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Martinez) on a remote island, where they're prey to cold, starvation, and drug
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smugglers with shotguns.
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Plotting was never Sayles' forte. What he did have
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from the start was an actor's insight into how people dramatize themselves and
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a novelist's insight into how they actually appear. He can write sharp, funny
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spiels and interlocking monologues in which people misrepresent themselves but
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somehow--miraculously--communicate their essence. At some point, though, he
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decided to become a saint of leftist independent filmmaking, to turn away from
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his real gifts, suppress his craftiness, and make movies about ordinary people
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crushed by an economic system that sets brother against brother (or sister). He
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cultivated a wanness in himself; he labored to locate the Canadian within.
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At its worst, Limbo is about when bad things
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happen to good people, and its ending is cruelly abrupt (although maybe
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merciful if it means what I think it does). But its best is really good. I'm
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not sure I totally buy Strathairn as a diffident loner with an aching
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conscience over a tragedy that wasn't his fault--the quintessential guiltless
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sinner. But Sayles has written some gorgeously tender and funny encounters
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between him and Mastrantonio. And she is simply extraordinary. Always a superb
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actress who never quite had the stature for a leap to stardom,
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Mastrantonio--like Diane Lane in A Walk on the Moon --has developed
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layers and an edge. Her Donna De Angelo (I hate that tart/angel name) is both
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desperate to grab onto a man and smart enough to watch in horror as she's
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grabbing. She has a torch singer's simultaneous immersion and distance--a
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talent for watching herself fall and for commenting on it exquisitely. This is
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a major performance, one of the comebacks of the decade.
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