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Hollywood Harry
(1985)
Director: Robert Forster
Cast: Robert Forster, Joe Spinell, Shannon Wilcox
So... as a child, what did you want to be
when you grew up? I think that pretty much all
of us had more than one kind of job dream when
we were little, and that includes me. When I was
in elementary school, I remember there were
several possible dream jobs that stuck in my
head as the years went by in that institution.
There was a brief time when, like I think just
about all kids do at one time or another, I
idolized firefighters and dreamed of becoming
one. I even remember writing in class a short
story of myself as a firefighter when we got an
assignment of "What would you like to be as an
adult?" Not only in the story did I put out a
building fire, but I saved people in an airplane
crash that happened at the same time. (And I was
rewarded with $100!) But eventually, I learned
how dangerous the job was, so I quickly put it
out of my mind. One of the other jobs that I
pictured myself in as an adult was a cartoonist.
I churned out pages of homemade comics for a
while until one day I realized that I couldn't
draw a darn, and I certainly didn't have the
patience to go to art school to learn to draw
more carefully and better. (Not long ago, I came
across some of my old comics, and judging from
their crappy quality I did the right thing in
quitting my dreams of becoming another Sam
Viviano.) Another job that I thought I might
like doing was becoming someone who paints those
yellow and white lines than run in the middle of
roads. Huh? Yeah, I have to admit that today I
wonder just what the heck I was thinking. In my
defense, I must point out that I was very
young when I had that dream.
The job I have as an adult that gives me the
money to clothe, feed, and shelter myself isn't
a job that I pictured myself when I was a child,
but as I said in a past review, I am very
satisfied with this position. I am also thankful
that I have some kind of job in these
tough economic times. My job may
not be one that
I dreamed of, but I am living out one of my
childhood job dreams with my hobby. When I was
young, I had dreams of being involved with the
movies. Usually my dreams of this would have my
imagination casting me as some kind of a hotshot
actor or director who would be unbelievably
talented and would be involved with extremely
popular movies or TV shows. That never happened
in real life, of course, but I have made a
Hollywood connection of sorts with this web site
of mine. Reviewing movies on my website (and
getting feedback from both readers and people
who were involved with the movies I review) is
fantastic. I am satisfied with my life. Despite
this, I still dream a lot about having the
absolutely, most wonderful, and perfect job for
myself. Several years ago I had the opportunity
to be paid to do some writing, and once I got a
taste for that I have never been able to shake
it. I would love to once again get paid to do
writing, and the most ideal such opportunity
would be to write screenplays. I have a lot of
screenplay ideas going on in my mind. But
there's little chance of that happening for me.
In Canada, just about all screenwriters have to
be directors as well in order to have their
screenplays bought. And I have no Hollywood
connections, so breaking in there would be near
impossible.
Such realizations of reality really put me
down in the dumps, so one of the ways I try to
cheer myself up is to think about what life
would be really like if I actually got one of
the jobs I dreamed about having all those years
ago. One of those jobs that I haven't mentioned
was being a private detective. When I was
younger, I was fascinated by the profession. In
television shows about private detectives, they
always seemed to have a colorful life. They
would charge fees running up to several hundred
dollars an hour - which seemed like a fortune to
me as a youngster. TV private detectives also
always seemed to keep meeting sexy women, and
they always seemed to need to use their firearm
on creeps who really deserved getting shot. But
as I got older, I learned the hard truths about
private detectives. For one thing, I remember
when MAD Magazine revealed to me that private
detectives in real life mainly worked on getting
provocative pictures for their clients who were
involved in messy divorces - not a very
glamorous thing to be doing. When I recently
spotted the private detective movie
Hollywood Harry at my local used video
store, my first thought was if it would
show me a sanitized look at the private
detective life or something closer to the real
thing. By the way, some of you may be wondering
why, after my recent review of
Who Killed
Mary What's 'er Name, just why I would
be tackling another detective movie so soon
after I stated in that review that I find a
number of
mystery movies to be somewhat confusing in some
details. I'll get to
that shortly.
The plot: Harry Petry is a down-and-out
Hollywood private detective. He hasn't had a
decent case in months, scraping by a living by
trading sex for cash. He is estranged from his
partner Max and their secretary Candy, more so
when he rejects an underage female client sent
to him by them. Then he gets the chance to make
a few serious dollars when the concerned father
of that young girl hires Harry to track her
down, and retrieve the X-rated video she made
with a sleazy guy. Harry reluctantly accepts the
job, but it's not going to be easy, especially
since around the same time his 14 year-old niece
Danielle arrives from the east coast with the
news that her parents are dead and now Harry is
her guardian. And she insists on tagging along
with her uncle Harry on this case. Okay, with
the plot out of the way, I'll get to the
question some of you are wondering, why did I
decide to tackle another mystery story so soon?
There are several reasons. The first that this
movie was released by Cannon. Golan and Globus
didn't actually make it (they picked it up after
production), but being a fan of the Go-Go boys'
schlocky stuff, I figured anything they would
pick up would stand proudly beside the stuff
they actually made. The second reason is that
Harry is played by Robert Forster, an actor I
have admired in a number of movies, including
Lone Hero.
Plus, he also directed this movie, and I was
intrigued by how he would do behind the camera
for the first time. The third reason was that
the video box stated that this movie was a
comedy. I figured that the multiple attempts to
get laughs would simplify the mystery angle and
make it easier to follow.
As you can see, I had high hopes for this
movie. But in the end, I was kind of let down.
To make that clearer, about half of the stuff in
the movie doesn't work. I'll start with the good
stuff of the movie. As a director, Forster shows
some promise. When the scene is set in a seedy
environment (such as Harry's apartment), Forster
makes it look pretty convincing. The
performances in the movie are pretty pleasing,
with no surprise that Forster is the star
performer. From the opening, he portrays Harry
with a weariness and sloppy lifestyle that is
spot on for this character. While he is in a
comedy, Forster wisely plays it straight for the
most part (only acting silly in one scene where
he dances.) It will probably come as a surprise
to some people that Harry's partner is played by
Joe Spinell, who had a career playing sick and
twisted people. But Spinell turns out to be able
to play a pretty likeable character well, even
though his role is somewhat limited. The offbeat
casting doesn't stop there; Forster's then wife
Shannon Wilcox plays Candy, and his daughter
Kate Forster plays his character's niece. Making
her acting debut, Kate proves to be up to the
task. Her character is pretty wise for her age,
but all of the "smart talk" she has to speak
never feels annoying or artificial. She helps
generate a great chemistry when she is paired
with her father in a scene, and this leads to
making several scenes with the two of them very
amusing to watch, the highlight being when their
conversation turns to the subject of sex as they
eat Chinese take-out.
If the movie had more of these two characters
together generating chemistry while working
together, it probably would have been a lot
better. But that's not all that's wrong with
Hollywood Harry. To be fair with
Forster, he was working on a pretty desperate
level; researching the movie, I found out that
he only had a budget of $160,000 up to the rough
cut stage, and the money he got for post
production wasn't that much more than that first
figure. The low budget painfully shows
throughout. The movie is very dark-looking, even
in outdoor scenes (one night scene is near
impossible to make out), a car accident happens
off-screen, dubbed-in dialogue and sound effects
are obvious, the poorly-recorded on-set dialogue
is sometimes hard to make out, and the shadow of
the boom mike makes at least one appearance.
While Forster may be able to be forgiven for the
low production values, he does have to shoulder
some of the movie's failing by accepting the
finished screenplay as it is. While
the writer managed to come up with a mystery of sorts
that even I found I could follow from the
beginning to the end, it was poorly paced. About
a third of the movie goes by before any real
investigation starts, and when the mystery is
eventually concluded, it happens at a point when
there is still a significant amount of the movie
to unroll. Forster mentioned in an interview how
hard it was to get financing for this movie, and
all these moments when the screenplay seems to
be spinning its wheels probably explains why it
was hard to attract the money men. If Forster
decides to direct again, I suggest that he
holds out for a
great screenplay. With
the acceptable financing it would probably get,
who knows what he could accomplish.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also: Brigham City,
Lone Hero,
New York Cop
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