RENAISSANCE MAN (1994)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
Watching a movie with Danny DeVito teaching remedial classes at a military base could invite a lot of guffaws based on its premise alone. "Renaissance Man" is not that film, in fact, I don't think I could even call it a comedy. It is a strange movie experience, sort of a marginal "Dead Poet's Society" clone except with a few more laughs and a lot of the same sentimentality. I liked it well enough but I was not sure what exactly I was watching.DeVito is Bill Rago, a failed Detroit advertising man who can't make it to an important pitch meeting due to heavy traffic. Nothing here screams funny or hysterical from the start, especially when DeVito is so restrained from his usual hyperactive likable self. When Bill finally makes it to the meeting, everyone is gone and just then, I thought, well, he is going to overhear a conversation in the nearby office and then blare out his DeVito mannerisms - shouting and yelling to justify himself. Only the movie never gives him that chance. DeVito simply walks away, disappointed.
Since Bill can't cut it in advertising anymore, he receives unemployment. The agency, however, offers him a job - teaching basic comprehension at an Army base. Not exactly cutthroat "Mad Men" work but that is all there is. Bill is reluctant, can't find his way through the base and is unsure of his superiors and the recruits whom he has to teach. In short, it looks like another raucous Danny DeVito comedy but that is not the route director Penny Marshall and writer Jim Burnstein take. Instead, the recruits turn out to be an upbeat motley crew who come from backgrounds where they have been disenfranchised (one from a trailer park, another from Detroit - no prizes awarded to those who can guess where Marky Mark's character is from). Bill decides to teach them about similes, oxymorons and the Shakespeare play, "Hamlet." In fact, the rest of the film devotes itself to the complexities inherent in "Hamlet" that go way beyond the famous speech, "To be or not to be." The teacher finds a way of having his recruits learn to apply Shakespeare's tragedy and the fates of its characters to their own lives.
"Renaissance Man" is watchable with sentimental inclinations to its material. It is also oddly moving at times and I love the lessons imparted by Bill (though nothing at the beginning of the movie suggests this man is a lover of English Lit.) But I do not know what to call this film...a comedy with dramatic intonations or a drama with serviceable comedic overtones. It begins as a DeVito scorcher of a comedy, to some extent, and then it decides to play it straight. Odd and oddly diverting.
Footnote: Dark victory is not an oxymoron. Failed victory would be more appropriately oxymoronic.






