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Flawless | |
---|---|
Directed by | Joel Schumacher |
Written by | Joel Schumacher |
Produced by | Joel Schumacher Jane Rosenthal Robert De Niro (uncredited) Neil Machlis |
Starring | Robert De Niro Philip Seymour Hoffman Barry Miller Chris Bauer Wilson Jermaine Heredia Daphne Rubin-Vega |
Cinematography | Declan Quinn |
Edited by | Mark Stevens |
Music by | Bruce Roberts |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | MGM Distribution Co. |
Release date |
|
Running time | 112 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $27 million[1] |
Box office | $4,488,529[1] |
Flawless is a 1999 American crime comedy-drama film written and directed by Joel Schumacher, and starring Robert De Niro and Philip Seymour Hoffman.
The film is set in an apartment complex, and covers the relationships between its residents. A retired security guard suffers a stroke while trying to help a neighbor. He is left partially paralyzed and with an impaired ability to speak. He hires a neighboring drag queen to give him singing lessons, in hopes of improving his speech ability.
Decorated and retired security guard Walter Koontz lives in a downtown apartment complex, where he is in constant conflict with drag queen Rusty and his friends. He frequents a night club, from which he conducts a superficial sexual relationship with Karen. At the same time he rejects Tia, deeming her a 'whore'.
One night crime boss "Mr. Z" and two goons come to the building looking for the money Amber's boyfriend stole from his organization. Having heard gunshots upstairs, Walt suffers a stroke while ascending the stairs to help. He awakens with the right side of his body paralyzed resulting in poor speech and posture, and giving him a limp that requires him to use a cane. Walter's ego massively suffers and he becomes ashamed to be seen in public, even skipping therapy, leading to his doctor visiting him at home. His physical therapist, who had been sent to Walt's home by the doctor, recommends a singing teacher to improve his speech. When Walt hails a taxi outside the building, he falls and drops the plan.
Rusty desires to have sex reassignment surgery, but lacks the money. When Walter comes to Rusty to use his musical talents for singing lessons, the pair, while initially argumentative and uncomfortable with each other, slowly become friends. Walter begins to gain confidence and progress towards resuming a normal life, his speech showing considerable improvement. Meanwhile, after having been told by Rusty that everyone pays in a relationship, including husbands and boyfriends, Walt calls Karen. After she claims rent problems, Walt lies that all his money went to therapy. After hearing this, she holds off on seeing him. Tia visits his apartment, and they dance and kiss. She leaves however, when Walt states his belief that his former colleague and friend Tommy must have hired her.
Walt tells Rusty that a former colleague of him and Tommy abused his friendship by hitching a ride to the airport, after having stolen a fortune from their employer. Rusty responds with his own confession: He had taken Mr. Z's money after the police had vacated the building to pay for her surgery, meaning the singing lessons had been a front. Feeling used again, Walt leaves in anger. Building superintendent Leo, who had been threatened by Mr. Z., opens Rusty's medical bill, realizing he has the money. Walt goes back to the nightclub for the first time since his stroke and makes up with Tia. When he returns Leo tells him to ignore any sounds he might hear that night. The three criminals ambush Rusty in his apartment, and Walt goes upstairs again. Together Rusty and Walt manage to kill them. The wounded Walt is loaded into an ambulance, after which Rusty hands the paramedics the cash to get him the best care available. They renew their friendship and singing lessons.
Hoffman considered De Niro to be the most imposing actor that he had ever worked with, noting how De Niro had the ability during filming to "listen" to him as an actor, and in turn, make Hoffman respond similarly because of his unique style of acting. Hoffman felt that his exposure to that level of acting profoundly improved his own abilities as an actor.[3]
In the United Kingdom, the film was released by Optimum Releasing as part of a two-film distribution deal with MGM.[4]
Review-aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes reports a 40% approval rating based on 57 reviews, with an average rating of 5.4/10,[5] and a consensus reading: "Robert De Niro and Philip Seymour Hoffman's Flawless performances live up to this dramedy's title; unfortunately, they're outweighed by the misguided picture surrounding them." Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade of "C" on scale of A+ to F.[6]
Hoffman was praised by critics for his ability to avoid clichés in playing such a delicate role.[7] Emily St. James, a transgender film critic, praised the warmth of his portrayal of Rusty, commenting that "Hoffman's work is quiet, moving, and humanistic, and it provides the film with a core Schumacher doesn't remotely earn. No matter; this is another movie worth seeing almost entirely for the titanic work Hoffman does near its center."[7] Roger Ebert highlighted Hoffman as "one of the best new character actors", remarking that he was "able to take a flamboyant role and find the quiet details in it".[8]
Hoffman received a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for Best Lead Actor.[9]