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Zelig By Tom Keogh
The thinking person's Forrest Gump, Woody Allen's 1983 Zelig
is a funny, atmospheric mock-documentary about the collision of one man's
manifest neuroses colliding with key moments in 20th-century history.
Allen plays the title character, a self-effacing, timorous fellow with
such a porous personality that he physically becomes a reflection of
whoever he is with. Complex and painstaking, the film's pre-Gump
special effects manage to place Allen, buried under a series of makeup and
prosthetic guises, in a number of scenes along with Adolf Hitler at a Nazi
rally, a pope at the Vatican, and famous guests at a garden party hosted
by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Similar in tone and satire to some of Allen's
short, comic pieces published in The New Yorker magazine, Zelig
is a one-note movie that takes its delicious time establishing the
fullness of its central joke. It's well worth the wait.
Academy Awards
Zelig received Academy Awards
nominations for Cinematography (Gordon Willis) and Costume Design (Santo
Loquasto). |
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Woody Allen
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|  | Stars: Woody Allen, Mia Farrow, Garrett Brown, Stephanie Farrow, Will Holt, Sol Lomita, Mary Louise Wilson, Michael Jeter
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|  | Released: July 15, 1983
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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