Movie Analysis:
"American
Beauty"
Review by Katharine
E. Monahan Huntley
"Welcome to
America's Weirdest Home Videos"-an apt line from
American Beauty-director Sam Mendes and screenwriter Alan
Ball's stark art set piece of individual torment and family calamity.
Familiar territory immediately reminiscent of Ordinary People
and The Ice Storm (films that influenced Mendes, Premiere
10/99), American Beauty is a Dramatica grand argument story
that compels us to "look closer" at pain and mundane and life
will reveal the spectacular.
INANITY
Main character
Lester Burnham recounts in voice-over: "I'm forty-two-years old.
In less than a year, I'll be dead. In a way, I'm dead already. . . .
Both my wife and daughter think I'm this gigantic loser (objective
story problem-perception). And they're right (mc problem-perception).
I've lost something very important. I'm not exactly sure what it is,
but I know I didn't always feel this . . . sedated (mc focus-inertia).
But you know what? It's never too late to get it back" (mc growth-start).
At Lester's ad agency,
it has been decided (os driver) that: ". . . everyone
write a job description, mapping out in detail how they contribute.
That way, management can assess who's valuable and who's 'expendable'"
(os concern conceptualizing). Lester objects (mc approach-do-er)
to this "fascist" order (os focus)-wife Carolyn,
a study in glacial ambition, asserts: "There is no decision.
Just write the damn thing! . . . you don't want to be unemployed"
(os direction-chaos).
Lester sulkily attends
daughter Jane's high school dance performance with Carolyn: "What
makes you so sure she wants us to be there? Did she ask us to come?
. . . I'm missing the James Bond marathon on TNT."
Jane's best friend
and fellow "Dancing Pantherette" Angela Hayes (allusion to
Nabokov's Lolita Haze?) catapults Lester out of his malaise: "I
feel like I've been in a coma for about twenty years (mc concern-past),
and I'm just now waking up" (mc growth-start)-priming him
for the impact of obstacle character Ricky Fitts.
Apathetically escorting
Carolyn to a realtor's function: "Lester, listen to me. This is
important . . . as you know, my business is selling an image (os
problem-perception) . . . do me a favor and act happy" (os
benchmark-being)-Lester is approached by Ricky, a waiter in the
hotel:
RICKY
I'm Ricky
Fitts. I just moved into the house next to you....Hey, do you party?
(subjective story concern-doing)
LESTER
I'm sorry?
RICKY
Do you get
high?
"Lester's
surprised, but instantly intrigued. . . . Ricky and Lester stand next
to a dumpster behind the service entrance to the hotel, smoking a
JOINT (ss thematic issue-senses). . . . Suddenly . . . a serious
young MAN in a cheap suit peers out at them. Ricky hides the joint."
MAN
(to Ricky)
Look. I'm
not paying you to . . . (eyes Lester suspiciously) . . . do whatever
it is you're doing out here (ss catalyst-interpretation).
RICKY
Fine. Don't
pay me. . . . I quit (oc driver-change). Now, leave me alone.
LESTER
I think you
just became my personal hero (ss concern-understanding).
Doesn't that make you nervous, just quitting your job like that?
RICKY
. . . I just
do these gigs every now and then as a cover. . . . But my dad (oc
domain-mind) interferes a lot less in my life when I pretend
(os benchmark-being) to be an upstanding young citizen with
a respectable job (os problem-perception).
Like all the objective
characters in American Beauty, Ricky has his own agenda (os domain-psychology).
Taking Jane in with an ardent video gaze-he is captivated:
JANE
What is it?
ANGELA
It's that
psycho next door. . .
JANE
I bet he's
filming us right now.
Voyeurism and exhibitionism
loop, as through the camera lens Ricky seeks out Jane from his bedroom
window:
"On
VIDEO: We're across from Jane's window, peering in. Jane tries to
shut the drapes, but Angela won't let her. Irritated, Jane retreats
into the room. We ZOOM toward her, even as Angela poses in the window,
waving, but we're clearly not interested in Angela. The ZOOM continues,
searching for Jane . . . . Finally, we settle on the full-length MIRROR
on the open closet door, where we see a REFLECTION of Jane . . . .
She's smiling."
Lester continues
to be directed by change: "It's a great thing to
realize you still have the ability to surprise yourself. Makes you wonder
what else you can do that you've forgotten about . . ."
He meets Ricky's
father, Colonel Frank Fitts, U.S. Marine Corps-a man locked in a perpetual
vise grip of impotent rage-always suspicious (oc thematic
counterpoint) of what goes on in his son's life. Immoral and/or
illegal:
RICKY
. . . G-13
. . . genetically engineered by the U.S. Government. Extremely
potent. But a completely mellow high, no paranoia. . . . Two grand.
LESTER
. . . Well,
now I know how you can afford all this equipment. When I was your
age, I worked at McDonald's all summer just to buy an eight track.
. . . it was probably the best time of my life (mc concern-past).
RICKY
My dad thinks
I paid for all this [audio/video equipment] with catering jobs.
Never underestimate the power of denial (os inhibitor-senses).
Lester and Carolyn's
marriage is another relationship in denial:
CAROLYN
This is not
a marriage.
LESTER
This hasn't
been a marriage for years. But you were perfectly happy as long
as I kept my mouth shut. Well, guess what? I've changed (mc
direction).
The changes
include Lester quitting his job (after blackmailing his boss for a sweet
severance package), hiring on at a fast food restaurant, and indulging
in adolescent fantasies (os dividend-the past). Incensed, Carolyn
relieves her stress by bopping Leonard Kane-The Real Estate King-and
obsessively shooting a "Glock 19" automatic revolver at the
local firing range.
Ricky confides his
fierce obsession to Jane: "I knew there was this entire life behind
things, and . . . this incredibly benevolent force, that wanted me to
know there was no reason to be afraid. Ever. Video's a poor excuse.
But it helps remember . . . and I need to remember . . ." (oc
concern-memory)
Ricky must recall
all instances of beauty to survive as the only child of a desensitized
(os inhibitor-senses) mother and militaristic father:
COLONEL
You need structure,
you need discipline (oc focus-order).
INSANITY
Ultimately, the
fairytale of an American family (os goal-conceptualizing) fractures(outcome-failure):
LESTER
Remember those
posters that said, "Today is the first day of the rest of your
life" Well, that's true of every day except one. The day you
die.
A day of cataclysmic
decisions.
Colonel Fitts misinterprets
(ss thematic counterpoint) the relationship between Lester and
Ricky as homosexual. An avowed homophobic-he brutally evicts his son
from their home. The Colonel is only repressing his own feelings (os
solution-actuality). Unpredictably (mc thematic issue)
he kisses Lester on the mouth. Lester compassionately rebuffs
his advances, unaware of the impossible circumstances (os
catalyst) in which the Colonel now (os forewarnings-present)
finds himself.
Ricky asks Jane
to run away with him:
RICKY
If I had to
leave tonight, would you come with me? If I went to New York. To
live. Tonight. Would you come with me?
JANE
Yes.
Angela, alienated
from Jane and Ricky, is determined to follow through with her seductive
promise to Lester. Until:
ANGELA
This is my
first time (os solution-actuality).
Reality check (mc
solution-actuality). Lester decides not to deflower this
American beauty (mc resolve-change).
Morality gives way
to mortality. The Colonel silently returns and takes a gun to Lester.
Carolyn, arriving on the scene, gathers Lester's empty suits in her
arms, understanding (os consequence) the husband she so
contemptuously dismissed, is really gone (limit-optionlock).
HUMANITY
Lester takes his
demise philosophically:
LESTER
. . . it's
hard to stay mad when there's so much beauty in the world. Sometimes
I feel like I'm seeing it all at once (mc mental sex-female),
and it's too much, my heart fills up like a balloon that's about
to burst . . . and then I remember to relax, and stop trying to
hold on to it, and then it flows through me like rain and I can't
feel anything but gratitude for every single moment (mc judgement-good)
of my stupid little life . . .
A life of artifice
and the ordinary redeemed by an appreciation for the extraordinary.
American
Beauty story engine settings
Copyright
© 1994-2006 Write Brothers, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Based on theories
and materials developed by Melanie Anne Phillips and Chris Huntley
Dramatica is a registered trademark of Screenplay Systems Incorporated. Patent
#5,734,916; #6,105,046
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