Film, TV & Streaming

A CUP OF JOE

In Barry Levinson's Jimmy Hollywood, an unemployed actor finally gets his shot at five minutes of TV fame by casting himself as a real-life anticrime vigilante. Sound familiar? Hero at Large, a lukewarm 1980 comedy with John Ritter, played the same hand. The feisty protagonist this time around is Joe...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

In Barry Levinson’s Jimmy Hollywood, an unemployed actor finally gets his shot at five minutes of TV fame by casting himself as a real-life anticrime vigilante. Sound familiar? Hero at Large, a lukewarm 1980 comedy with John Ritter, played the same hand.

The feisty protagonist this time around is Joe Pesci, currently the movies’ favorite guy-next-door. As the downtrodden Jimmy Alto, who reinvents himself as “Jericho,” self-proclaimed guardian of the L.A. streets, Pesci has fun with all the usual shtick–theatrical ego and the public taste for media sensation, the smoking junkers out-of-work “artists” drive and the crummy waiter jobs they take while hope remains in bloom. In the finale, Pesci even gets to do Jimmy Alto’s John Garfield blaze-of-glory number.

Victoria Abril has a nice turn as the hero’s beleaguered girlfriend (he’s spent her last $200 to plaster his face and phone number on a bus bench), and Christian Slater stumbles through the proceedings as Jericho’s brain-damaged, crime-fighting accomplice.

Pesci, gotten up in a shoulder-length blond wig, is entertaining, but this second-gear trifle by the director of Rain Man, Diner and Avalon trades on an ironic conceit. It tells us that all those idealistic strivers scratching out a living on Hollywood Boulevard are really the heart and soul of the entertainment game.

This year, make your gift count –
Invest in local news that matters.

Our work is funded by readers like you who make voluntary gifts because they value our work and want to see it continue. Make a contribution today to help us reach our $50,000 goal!

$50,000

But how many of them got auditioned for the Joe Pesci part here? Exactly.

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Arts & Culture newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...