Archive for the ‘Comedian’ Category

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Comedian Streaming

Vendredi, avril 23rd, 2010
Comedian Streaming. Comedian Streaming.

Movie Title: Comedian
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“Comedian” chronicles Jerry Seinfeld’s return to the comedy club circuit after dismantling his sitcom in 1998 and retiring his well-honed live routines in the HBO special “I’m Telling You For The Last Time.”

And though the documentary has lots of stand-up comedy, as well as appearances by comics such as Chris Rock, Jay Leno, Garry Shandling, Robert Klein and Bill Cosby, this is not really a concert movie. It’s actually a glimpse into the business of entertaining and the process behind making an audience laugh. “Comedian” is a funny movie, but it’s really more about the humor of anxiety and self-doubt than punch lines.

Shot on digital video by Christian Charles (who directed Seinfeld’s snappy American Express commercials) and crammed with excellent jazz and pop music, the movie follows Seinfeld and a young comic named Orny Adams as they hit the road, work on new material and perform on “Late Night With David Letterman.” Adams — keyed-up and hypersensitive — doesn’t fare as well as Jerry but given that he’s sharing space in a movie with one of the most popular television personalities in history, he kind of has the deck stacked against him.

And yes, Seinfeld, after being out of the spotlight for a while, does remain an interesting personality, even more so when caught on a relatively candid camera (Jerry curses?). His backstage conversations with Leno, Cosby, Rock and Colin Quinn reveal a guarded camaraderie, and fans who spent a significant chunk of the ’90s chuckling at the misadventures of Jerry, George, Kramer and Elaine will probably find it amusing that Seinfeld still actively worries he’ll bomb in front of a crowd.

But for all Seinfeld’s agonized fretting over writing jokes and winning the audience’s approval, anybody who puts in 40-plus hours a week at an office probably won’t find much sympathy for a guy who has been given hundreds of millions of dollars doing the very thing he loves to do.

Nevertheless, “Comedian” is a sharp, insightful, wry and occasionally stinging piece of business.

This ends up being less a documentary about comedy and more a character study of a mature and an immature craftsman. The craft here is comedy, but it really could be anything, especially any type of art. A friend and I watched this and afterwards talked about how well Jerry Seinfeld and Orny Adams illustrate the principles of leadership.

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Jerry Seinfeld is the portrait of a mature craftsman.

1. He is able maintain a healthy separation between himself and his craft. When a bit is not funny, it doesn’t mean he isn’t funny, it means the bit needs work. So he reworks it. When a set doesn’t go well, he accepts the responsibility (doesn’t “blame it on the candles”) and figures out how to make the next set go better.

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2. He has a life outside of his work. We only see his family for a few seconds; this is a film about comedy, and that’s his job, not his life.

3. He views other craftsmen in his field as resources and comrades, not as threats and enemies. It is clear Jerry has a warm relationship with other comics, most notably Colin Quinn, and is able to discuss the craft and refine material with them. He listens to their advice, airs his concerns, and hears their concerns. He learns more about the craft by discussing it with other craftsmen.

4. He is willing to take risks in order to make himself a better craftsman, and produce a better craft. The real story of Jerry Seinfeld here is that he is starting over — all new material — in order to sharpen himself, to challenge himself and stay on top of the game. It’s a huge risk that makes him a better craftsman.

Orny Adams is the portrait of an immature craftsman.

1. He is unable to maintain a healthy separation between himself and the craft. When a set doesn’t go well, Orny takes it personally. It’s like the audience is attacking is worth, his value as a person. He believes that if he is not funny, he is worthless. As a defense mechanism, he gets angry. At different points in the movie, he rages at a bad audience, a bad club, and a bad time slot.

2. Apparently, he has no life outside his work. He calls his mom once, to tell her he has one a contest. But it’s clear he’s unhappy, and it’s quite possible it’s because all he has and does and is is comedy.

3. He views other craftsmen in his field as threats and enemies. It’s pretty clear that other comics respect Orny Adams, but none are his friends. At one point in the movie, another comic tries to give him some advice — primarily about what I noted in point #2, that he needs to have a life outside of his comedy — but he gives it like he’s giving it to a rattlesnake about to strike. He is constantly verbally backing away, disclaiming, trying to say what he has to say without being struck. And Orny receives it like a rattlesnake. He cannot hear what the man has to say, and instead tells him what he ought to be saying to him. At another point, he says he has respect for Jerry Seinfeld, but it looks more like envy to me. He wonders at one point, if Jerry’s success is not simply the result of luck.

(That may be misquoted in the movie. I got a strong sense while watching it that Orny doesn’t know when to keep his mouth shut, and that the documentary editors cut pieces of his dialogue from their context to make what he says sound worse than it actually is.)

4. The prospect of taking risks with his craft makes him anxious and miserable. He has to take a pretty minor risk when he goes on Letterman — he has to change one key word in his set — and it gives him fits. He rages against the show, and is clearly a nervous wreck afterwards. The sad thing is, the risk worked. The bit was still funny. But his inability to separate his craft from himself (back to #1) mean that this risk absolutely wrecked him.

Orny Adams is a very talented comedian, and in all fairness, if we went back and watched Jerry Seinfeld twenty years ago, he probably would have looked much the same. Here’s hoping that he matures into a competent craftsman. My advice to him would be to take some time off — spend a year away from the circuit, away from comedy, so that he can establish an identity that isn’t the craft. Then come back. If not, I have to agree with George Shapiro’s words: “Yeah, Orny, I think you’ll be big. But I think you’ll still be unhappy.”
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