Indicated by spacious compositions and a bracing unpredictability, Paul Thomas Anderson's romantic comedy Punch-Drunk Love is a marriage, if you will, between Claire Denis' audacious Trouble Every Day and Steven Shainberg's sadomasochism fairy tale Secretary--here's a trio of films that announce 2002 as a year perhaps best defined by its aggressively non-traditional, hopelessly romantic love stories (toss Todd Haynes' Far From Heaven, Cronenberg's Spider, and Roger Avary's The Rules of Attraction into that mix).
A surprisingly focused (coming in at just under 90 minutes without credits) and mature work from a wunderkind director that until now unfailingly diluted his occasional strokes of brilliance with acres of blather, Punch-Drunk Love features a shockingly adept turn by Adam Sandler, a man who has built a dung empire from speech impediments and psychopathic outbursts. Punch-Drunk Love tethers Sandler's propensity towards mining lisps, race, and so on for humour as it gives careful rein to the sudden violent outbursts that Sandler, heretofore, had always used to comic effect. The resulting performance is something of a marvel in that it is everything that we expect from Sandler, now guided in the right direction. Not only is the picture the successful rendering of One Hour Photo, it's one of those things that one never suspected could exist: the perfect Adam Sandler vehicle that doesn't, consequently, suck.
Sandler is Barry Egan, a man fond of blue suits and possessed of a severe personality disorder who owns and operates, it would seem, his own decorative toilet-plunger business out of a warehouse. When he meets Lena (Emily Watson) one day as she's dropping off her car at the mechanic's next door, Barry, in his painful, clearly dangerous way, falls in love. Subtext left as subtext, the story proper is the classic quirky pursuit intrigue involving a stalker personality and an impossibly angelic pursued. Rather than wallow in the shallow end of formula, however, the picture destabilizes the protagonists' respective roles, making Barry unbalanced rather than rakishly dogged and the inamorata, Lena, aware of her peril and excited by it.
What Anderson manages in Punch-Drunk Love is to pace the familiar motions of the unlikely romance between rogue and prize to a broken calliope. It is discordant and calculatedly jarring, projecting Barry's ruined mind's confusion and fear, building a tension and sense of danger that is delicious in its nerviness. Anderson regular Philip Seymour Hoffman plays Dean the Mattress Man, a mattress salesman moonlighting as the operator of a phone-sex scam operator who provides the film the bulk of its emotional and physical conflict.
Yet Punch-Drunk Love is more than an exercise in genre explosion: it is an exploration of the actual euphoria of new love, perhaps even first love, in all its uncontainable passion and rash acts. Anderson presents a pudding label contest in a way as interesting and romantic as canned peaches in a Wong Kar Wai film and makes of an impromptu Sandler soft-shoe in a grocery aisle something as pure and sentimental as Gene Kelly splashing through pools of water. The picture's soundtrack is now raucous, now soaring romantic overture while the look of the piece falls in the midst of Polanski's penchant for slow push-ins and Kubrick's affection for the sterility of modernity, though it's warm.
Punch-Drunk Love enthrals for its craftsmanship and its conviction, for its fabulous instinct for magical realism (a piano appearing in the middle of a road, a telephone booth light coming on at the moment of joyous connection), and for a pair of performances that almost speak more for Anderson's talent for casting than the actors themselves. Punch-Drunk Love is a work of Beckett-ian poetry, a carefully structured scream of consciousness that is tortured and unsettling--but unquestionably alive.-Walter Chaw
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I adore Paul Thomas Anderson and I love Punch-Drunk Love (see my capsule review, as well as FILM FREAK CENTRAL's Top 10 of 2002), but he can be idiosyncratic to the point of snobbery. Case in point: his handpicked supplementary material for the 2-disc Special Edition DVD of Punch-Drunk Love--whose 12-minute outtake reel, for instance, has the pretense of a short film to go with its pretentious title ("Blossoms and Blood"), yet succeeds neither as an experimental (because your mind is filling in the narrative gaps) nor as an illumination of the trim bin (because the footage isn't contextualized for us; I have my suspicions, given the profusion of aimless camera work, that much of it belongs to the aborted two weeks of shooting before the production shut down and reorganized). In any event, it seems tailored for an audience of one (Anderson).
Consider also that the only subtitle option offered for the extra features is Korean; Anderson's obsession with fake commercials, which resurfaces in the DVD's 50-second "Mattress Man" spot; and the dozen tiresome Jeremy Blake "Scopitone" interstitials. (They join a 3-minute montage of Blake's art set to Anne Kerr's frothy "I've Gone Native Now.") On the other hand, the two included deleted scenes are revelatory, the first ("The Sisters Call") running seven minutes and concluding with a dark passage in which Barry has a borderline nervous breakdown triggered by the sight of a little boy, the second an alternate version of the ATM mugging that uses the same dialogue to achieve a completely different, if inferior, effect. An Easter egg "shuffle" function plus Punch-Drunk Love's standard, Scopitone-themed, and French theatrical trailers round out the second platter.
Disc One contains Punch-Drunk Love alone configured to Superbit specs (widescreen-only, Dolby Digital and DTS soundtracks). Anderson advises us in the insert booklet (comprised mostly of, yep, Blake's pieces) to "make sure [our] blacks are black," to "let...whites bloom a bit," and to "listen to (sic) loud!" With those instructions firmly heeded, I found both the 2.35:1 anamorphic transfer and its DTS 5.1 audio (apparently ES-encoded though unlisted as such) to be gob-smacking; the influence of sound consultant Gary Rydstrom is in evidence from the surreal opening car accident, and Jon Brion's score oscillates from channel to channel with outlandish grace. Pictorially speaking, this is the most accurate small-screen rendering in recent memory--the film's colour and contrast look exactly as I remember from the cinema, while there's been no digital compensation for the soft-focus quality of DP Robert Elswit's images. The set comes packaged in a gatefold with a wide slipcase.-Bill Chambers
© Film Freak Central; filmfreakcentral.net. This review may not be reprinted, in whole or in part, without the express consent of its author.
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DVD GRADES:
Image A+
Sound A+
Extras C+ |
DVD VITALS:
Running Time
95 minutes
MPAA
R
Aspect Ratio(s)
2.35:1 ONLY, 16x9-enhanced
Languages
English DD 5.1 EX,
English DTS 5.1,
English Dolby Surround,
French Dolby Surround
CC
Yes
Subtitles
English, French
DVD-9 + DVD-5
Region One
Columbia Tri-Star

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PUNCH-DRUNK LOVE
Original Motion Picture Soundtrack CD
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Published: June 14, 2003
PUNCH-DRUNK LOVE MADE OUR TOP 10 OF 2002
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