The set-up is great fun, and Fraser and Fonda are lovely together. But the movie really takes off in the land of Morphos, where a variety of monsters roam the neon bars and alleys like the interplanetary mélange hanging out with Harrison Ford in that bar in Star Wars. At one point Julie falls asleep in Stu’s hospital room and he infiltrates her nightmare (which is in black and white), where Kimmy pulls the plug, over her objections, and Stu’s body deflates like a balloon. Later there’s another, equally nifty black-and-white nightmare: Stu’s dog Buster dreams he’s strapped to an operating table while cat surgeons armed with sharp instruments hover dangerously close to his genitals. (The magical photography is by the amazing Andrew Dunn; among Selick’s other gifted visual collaborators are production designer Bill Boes, costume designer Beatrix Aruna Pasztor, special make-up effects supervisor Greg Cannom, and a whole team of special effects technicians, led by Chad Baalbergen.) There are almost too many treats to take in; it seems to me that kids old enough to laugh at the nightmare imagery – kids who love dark graphics – would have a field day with this movie.
Brendan Fraser, with his alter ego Monkeybone |
Esposito’s face is pasted onto a rodent body; it’s funny the first time you see him, but it doesn’t do much for his performance. And Goldberg’s trademark superciliousness doesn’t do much for the movie in general. (You can predict exactly how she’s going to read every line.) But Fraser proves to be adept at playing Stu and Monkeybone against each other; he’s a graceful, bouncy physical clown. In the last half hour Stu persuades Death to let him return to life for an hour in the body of a gymnast who died in a freak accident and is in the process of having his organs removed for harvesting, and as the gymnast Chris Kattan walks away with what’s left of the picture. This man died of a broken neck, so he can’t keep his head up without taping a split to the back of it, and he moves at a bizarre angle. But he’s a champion athlete, so he’s light on his feet (plus he’s already lost some of his innards, which lightens him up even more), and he can really streak. Kattan must have whooped with joy when he read the script; this is one of the best roles anyone’s written for a physical comedian in the last couple of decades. Monkeybone is mischievous but ultimately very sweet-natured; at the time when it came out, I would have said it would please a lot of people. Pity it was wrongly pegged as a stink bomb.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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