| Johnny Depp, Martin Landau , Sarah
Jessica Parker , Patricia Arquette, Bill Murray, Jeffrey Jones .
Edward D. Wood Jr. was an actor writer-director-producer, occasionally
in drag, who combined meager bursts of talent with an undying optimism
to create some of the most bizarrely memorable "B" movies
to ever come out of Tinseltown. Though Wood died in obscurity as
an alcoholic in 1978, his films have been considered cult classics
for years. He is consistently voted the worst director who ever
lived. You would think this an odd subject, but director Tim Burton
harnesses the undying hopefulness that made Wood such a character.
Shot in black and white, just like Wood's creations, this stylized,
witty production captures the poetic absurdity of Wood's films and
his unconventional life. Burton's recreation of Wood's wonderfully
awful Plan 9 from Outer Space looks much better than the original
low-budget quickie. Burton tackled an extremely strange subject
matter for a biopic, but Wood is presented as naive almost to the
point of delusion, so the story works. The pace sags in the middle,
as the weirdness starts to wear thin, but Depp proves himself an
adroit actor, even while wearing angora and a blonde wig. Wood's
unconventional repertoire company is faithfully reproduced, including
an Academy Award-winning Martin Landau as Bela Lugosi. Landau is
pathetic, droll, and charismatic as the elderly junkie who made
his last screen appearances in Wood's films. |