Adaptation. (R)
Cast: Nicolas Cage, Tilda Swinton, Meryl Streep, Chris Cooper
Release Date: December 6, 2002
Runtime: 1 hr. 56 mins.
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Despite the success of his first produced script, "Being John Malkovich," for which he received an Academy Award nomination for best original screenplay, Charlie Kaufman is plagued by insecurities, both in his career and his personal life. When he is hired to adapt "The Orchid Thief," a nonfiction book about a fanatical orchid breeder, John Laroche, he is completely stumped. Though, on the surface, the book is about Laroche's flower poaching adventures in the Florida Everglades, on another level it's also about the desire in all of us to experience passion. This longing plagues the book's author, Susan Orlean and, Charlie realizes, himself as well. Charlie's twin brother, Donald Kaufman, only makes things worse when he moves in with Charlie and announces he's going to be a screenwriter too. As Charlie battles his severe case of writer's block, Donald cheerily types away on a script about a serial killer with multiple-personality disorder. Donald's script immediately sells, making him the "hot" new writer in town. Then, one day, Charlie has a last ditch inspiration. He'll use his own dilemma as a framework for the script about Laroche and Orlean. But as the words start to flow, and the story takes shape, Charlie inadvertently sets in motion a chain of events impacting on the lives of all the characters.
Review
Screenwriter Charlie Kaufman, as played by Nicolas Cage, runs into trouble trying to adapt the book The Orchid Thief into a movie and ends up writing the screenplay about his difficulty in coming up with the adaptation.
Story
Trying to come up with a concise description of Adaptation is almost as difficult as Charlie Kaufman's writing his screenplay. There's just so much great stuff involved in the film--love, drugs, loneliness, the movie industry, orchids, sex, the meaning of life, death--that to try and explain the whole thing would take much longer than a paragraph. In any case, here goes. Screenwriter Kaufman (Nicolas Cage), a hot commodity after penning the quirky Being John Malkovich, is hired by a big movie studio to adapt the best-selling novel The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean (Meryl Streep). As Kaufman delves into the book, Susan, a writer for The New Yorker, is sent to do a story on John Laroche (Chris Cooper), a man who steals orchids from the Florida Everglades, and forms an odd attachment to him. Meanwhile, the introspective Kaufman lets his insecurities get the better of him and he simply can't find a way to write a movie about flowers. Finally, he decides to write the screenplay about his experience trying to adapt the novel. He elicits the help of his gregarious twin brother Donald (also Cage), a budding screenwriter himself, who's taken a more commercial, formulaic route to writing (Donald's current screenplay is about a cop, a serial killer and a victim--who are all the same person). Eventually all these individuals come together, where the story gets even more convoluted. Suffice to say, you'll just have to go see the film to get it.
Acting
The entire cast is a marvel to behold, especially Cage, even if he is the wild card of the bunch. Let's face it, the guy's star quality has dwindled considerably in recent years with a sizable string a major flops such as Windtalkers and Captain Corelli's Mandolin. Casting agents aren't clamoring to sign him up like they once were. Yet, winning a Best Actor Oscar (for Leaving Las Vegas) says something, and thankfully, we are privy to that Nicolas Cage in Adaptation. He plays the brothers as the introvert/artist and the extrovert/hack that they are, but also manages to convey the subtle similarities between the two as well. And like a breath of fresh air, Streep returns to the big screen after a lengthy hiatus (her last film was 1999's Music of the Heart) to play the brilliant-but-confused Orlean. Streep infuses the character with the right mix of intellect, loneliness and desperation in trying to figure out her place in the world. Rounding out this strange trio, Cooper's Laroche is sort of the ''id''--the base, human part of the movie, exposing the seedy underbelly, while the other two try to find deeper meaning in life. Cooper (American Beauty) selflessly digs in to play Laroche, with his missing teeth and sweaty T-shirts, and it's a wonderful performance. Someone needs to give this tremendous character actor his due, very soon. Ron Livingston (Band of Brothers) also does a nice turn as Kaufman's callous agent.
Direction
One thing has been made very clear--Being John Malkovich wasn't a fluke. The talented team of Spike Jonze and Charlie Kaufman have come up with another pure gem. This time, however, even though director Jonze choreographs the film beautifully, from poetic shots of ghost orchids (a rare type of the orchid family) to Charlie's sweaty, nervous moments, Adaptation is really Charlie Kaufman's film--that is, the real Kaufman, not the movie one, if he really exists (wait, has anyone ever seen a picture of Charlie Kaufman?) What he has done is outrageous, narcissistic and could very well turn out to be the one of the most unique screenplay devices ever dreamed up. For any writer--be it screenwriter, novelist, movie critic--this movie just hits all the way home and should become a standard in showing exactly what it is like to agonize over words. Yet, Adaptation isn't completely self-indulgent. It twists in on itself in the end and actually gives us some true Hollywood-thriller moments. It also does an expert job poking fun at the movie industry, which may harm the film's Oscar chances because the Academy generally doesn't like it when you make fun of them (although if it doesn't get a screenplay nod, I may have to send an angry letter).
Bottom Line
Get ready for one of this year's truly unique and inspired films. Adaptation is a wild and wacky trip from the creators of Being John Malkovich in which anything goes. You may have to see it more than once so you don't miss anything.
Synopsis
Despite the success of his first produced script, "Being John Malkovich," for which he received an Academy Award nomination for best original screenplay, Charlie Kaufman is plagued by insecurities, both in his career and his personal life. When he is hired to adapt "The Orchid Thief," a nonfiction book about a fanatical orchid breeder, John Laroche, he is completely stumped. Though, on the surface, the book is about Laroche's flower poaching adventures in the Florida Everglades, on another level it's also about the desire in all of us to experience passion. This longing plagues the book's author, Susan Orlean and, Charlie realizes, himself as well. Charlie's twin brother, Donald Kaufman, only makes things worse when he moves in with Charlie and announces he's going to be a screenwriter too. As Charlie battles his severe case of writer's block, Donald cheerily types away on a script about a serial killer with multiple-personality disorder. Donald's script immediately sells, making him the "hot" new writer in town. Then, one day, Charlie has a last ditch inspiration. He'll use his own dilemma as a framework for the script about Laroche and Orlean. But as the words start to flow, and the story takes shape, Charlie inadvertently sets in motion a chain of events impacting on the lives of all the characters.