Whatever Works

 

Whatever Works is Woody Allen's first New York movie after five years abroad. It's his first in even longer to center on the Woody Allen character — an urban neurotic, here named Boris Yellnikoff and brashly played by Larry David. Toughened and (relatively) rejuvenated by David's aggressive performance, the Allen surrogate is introduced treating his friends to a lecture on the "God racket." Nothing especially new — Allen wrote this script 30 years ago and intended it for no less a force of nature than Zero Mostel. Nastier than David's character on Curb Your Enthusiasm, Boris is a cousin to insult comedian Don Rickles — smug, self-absorbed and argumentative with an unshakable faith in his listeners' stupidity and his own "huge worldview." Whatever Works shifts into gear when Boris finds a teenage runaway named Melodie (Evan Rachel Wood) camped out in front of his shabby downtown digs and grudgingly takes her in. Of course, Melodie is a cheerful, optimistic, winsome Mississippi belle. They "date" (he takes her to Grant's Tomb and Yonah Schimmel's knishery) and they marry. Melodie's parents — white-bread, Jesus-praising "aborigines," as their son-in-law characterizes them — arrive in New York, and the movie dons its jammies and goes to sleep. Whatever Works illustrates, even as it names, Allen's artistic limitations.

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this thread:

Add a comment

Author Archives

Latest in Film

Facebook Activity

All contents ©2012 Kansas City Pitch LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this service may be reproduced in any form without the express written permission of Kansas City Pitch LLC,
except that an individual may download and/or forward articles via email to a reasonable number of recipients for personal, non-commercial purposes.
Website powered by Foundation