Richard Lewis, Dianne Wiest, Faye Dunaway, Amanda Plummer,
Parker Posey, Liza Harris, Spalding Gray, Howard Rollins. (R, 88 min.)
The great insight of 12-step programs is that chronic substance abuse is less about
thrills than finding a system for living and a source of daily comfort. Like Lou
Reed said about The Big H: "It's my life and it's my wife." In this film adaptation
of Gary Lennon's play Blackout, the characters are all members of a New York City
Alcoholics Anonymous group for whom the corny A.A. rituals and mantras ("By the grace
of God, one day at a time, I've got 70 days sober. Thank you.") are substitutes of
a sort for less manageable regimens of boozing and doping. Most of the action happens
during one nighttime meeting, from which Jim (Lewis) disappears in a funk after delivering
an emotional speech about his lifelong problems with self-medication. In alternating
scenes, new members passionately describe why they got on the wagon as the long-sober
Jim hits a series of Times Square liquor stores in preparation for a disastrous swan-dive
off. Like many standup comics before him, Lewis displays an innate flair for dramatic
acting and more than holds his own among the talent-packed roster of co-stars. The
agonizing scenes in which he wavers on the brink of his epic bender vividly illustrate
the torment of a man who knows that self-destruction is his most natural mode of
behavior, and that living straight is like breathing an alien atmosphere for which
his lungs were never designed. Less successful are the group members' testimonial
scenes, which are individually brilliant if a bit wearing in their cumulative effect.
Dunaway, Rollins, Harris, and Plummer all nail their plainspokenly eloquent soliloquies,
creating fully realized characters in five-minute bursts of dialogue. Watching these
eminent actors do their thing is great stuff, though after a while it starts to feel
like you're at a carnival watching a procession of sledgehammer-wielding bruisers
try to ring the bell on one of those test-your-strength machines. ("Faye Dunaway
-- Take your shot!") Nonetheless, the unapologetically earnest message of Drunks comes
across with force and conviction and will probably leave you with a new respect for
A.A. and other programs of its ilk. Like Glen Caron's Clean and Sober, Drunks is
a 100-proof shot of reality from a tenuous, desperate place where millions of us
live 24-7-365.
--Russell Smith
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