I knew only a little about Moore
going in, hadn’t seen any of his work, and had a passing knowledge of the
“blaxploitation” subculture of the 70s; this film revitalises him, making him
real and relatable in a way comparable to what the 1994 Ed Wood did for another
famously “bad” filmmaker. But for me, Dolemite is my Name was also a reminder
of Eddie Murphy’s special genius. It’s been a while since I saw him – the last
time was probably 20 years ago in his splendid double role in Bowfinger (which,
coincidentally, was also about a filmmaking unit with more enthusiasm than
talent). He puts everything he has into this role; it was clearly a personal
project for him.
One idea I thought was poignantly
implied here: that even what is widely considered “bad art” can beget good
things, through the effect it has on people who for very personal reasons find
validation or resonance in it – including marginalised artists who, stirred and
encouraged by something they can relate to, go on to create more lasting things
themselves. A scene at the end has Rudy Ray Moore, at the crowded late-night
premiere of Dolemite, opting not to go into the hall but to hang around
outside, entertaining the viewers waiting in line for the next show. Among
those viewers is a young boy, a huge Rudy fan who can’t believe his luck that
his idol is bantering and rapping with him. I haven’t read much around the film,
but it struck me that in 1975, when this scene was set, Eddie Murphy himself
would have been around the age of this young boy – and I wondered if there was
something autobiographical about the scene, or even just a bit of
wish-fulfilment in it. Either way, if Murphy has produced and starred in a film
this good – which is largely about the making of a “bad” film – it says
something about the capacity of low art to inspire and nourish
P.S. Dolemite is my Name was
written by Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski, who also scripted Ed Wood. In
one of the most moving scenes in the earlier film, there is a suggestion that
the talentless Edward Wood and the genius Orson Welles were kindred spirits in
a way: misunderstood and persecuted, united by a childlike passion for their
medium. A similar, more fleeting analogy is made in Dolemite is my Name, via a
mention of John Cassavetes, the very respected director who realised his
visions on tiny budgets. I can imagine the ghosts of Cassavetes and Rudy Ray
Moore very surprised at finding themselves sharing a cell in a directors'
purgatory -- but then overcoming their shyness and getting down to swapping
harrowing stories.
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