Inherent Vice has been promoted to the List of the 366 Best Weird Movies ever made. Read the Certified Weird entry here.
DIRECTED BY: Paul Thomas Anderson
FEATURING: Joaquin Phoenix, Joanna Newsom, Josh Brolin, Katherine Waterston, Owen Wilson, Martin Short
PLOT: In 1970 Los Angeles, private investigator and marijuana enthusiast “Doc” Sportello investigates several converging cases while dodging a hippie-hating police detective out to get him.
WHY IT MIGHT MAKE THE LIST: Paul Thomas Anderson’s work has flitted around the edges of the bizarre, beginning with the baffling ending to Magnolia, through the reader-recommended oddity Punch-Drunk Love and the existential meanderings of The Master. With this stoned adaptation of Thomas Pynchon’s studiously esoteric novel, Anderson may finally have passed over to the weird side for good.
COMMENTS: I don’t think it’s a mistake that’s it’s easy to misread the title Inherent Vice as Incoherent Voice. This smoky noir in which everything connects, but nothing does, is like a comic version of William Burroughs’ “Naked Lunch” (the novel, not the movie); but instead of an expatriate junkie’s 1950s nightmare, it’s an American pothead’s 1960s reality of a world of alarming signifiers (Vietnam, the Manson family, Nixon rallies) that float past, occasionally colliding and combining like the hot wax spheres in a lava lamp. The plot is doled out in fits and starts, as if Doc is suffering from blackouts. He probably as; at one point he writes “not hallucinating” in his detective’s notebook as an act of self-reassurance. Characters like Reese Witherspoon’s hot-to-trot assistant D.A. or Benicio Del Toro‘s maritime lawyer plop in to drop bits of exposition without much explanation of who they are, where they came from or why they care. Like a slightly more coherent Branded to Kill, deconstructing American detectives instead of Japanese yakuza, Inherent Vice assembles its pseudo-story out of warped genre tropes: hard-bitten detectives who inhale bong hits instead of slamming shots of bourbon; femme fatales who manipulate saps into giving them a good spanking.
Better to think of Inherent Vice not as a plotted movie, but as a movie composed of free-associated plot elements. There’s a decadent real-estate magnate with a private sex cult, Aryan biker gangs, hippie-hating flattoped cops, a disappearing surf-sax player, an insane asylum that doubles as a private prison, and a vertically integrated Taiwanese heroin consortium. For added oddness, there’s conspicuous product placement for nonexistent brands, ridiculous fang-shaped skyscrapers that pop up in formerly empty lots, and a manic Martin Short as a drug-snorting, cradle-robbing dentist. There is even resolution, of a sort: Doc discovers all of the missing persons before the end credits roll. But you may be mystified as to how he did it.
Inherent Vice is the new masterpiece of hippie noir. It rides that fine line between rationality and irrationality, heading towards a hazy neverland where universal paranoia holds sway. Not only does it ride that line, it eventually snorts it up.
WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:
I’m all for this making the list. Paul Thomas Anderson just keeps making better, and better films.
Last four lines are Pure Poesy, Prof Smalley…ManyThanks for Your super review!
If only this was released just a few weeks earlier nationwide, it would of made it among my favorite films of 2014 easily!
I’m really hoping they release this sooner than later on dvd/blu-ray. I’m already poised to rewatch and absorb the stony languor at least 5-12 more times.
“Like Mothra sez to Godzilla: Let’s go eat some place.”
Also the comparison you made with Branded To Kill might be actually novel in the ongoing discussion of this film. Most critics that I’m familiar with draw parallels with Altman’s The Big Sleep.
Altman did “The Long Goodbye”
Such a terrific movie! Moto Pancako!!
Saw this one again. Can’t say enough good things! Such an entertaining, funny, and complete piece of film!
Correction: Set in 1970s Los Angeles, not San Francisco.
Eh, all those California towns look alike to me. Actually I have no excuse for a mistake that basic. Correction applied.
I saw this in theatres, after coming from the beach, so I wasn’t stoned but in a drifty mindset… loved it.