The Spacey from outer space
Kevin Spacey is out there. An impressively talented
actor who has recently appeared in some of Hollywood's
biggest successes (commercially, if not always
critically), Spacey has nonetheless demonstrated a
knack for keeping himself, or at least the details of
his private life, largely out of the public eye. This
is somewhat refreshing, considering the general state
of media whoredom in the U.S. But, being the media
whore that I admittedly am, this only makes me want to
know more.
My favorite bit of Spaceyiana is from the actor's
interview with Playboy. In response to all the
"is he or isn't he" conjecturing about his sexuality
in the absence of any high-profile Hollywood romances,
Spacey "came out" to Playboy as heterosexual.
Further, Spacey admitted that he has no problem with
anyone thinking he is gay, and in fact has done
nothing to dispel this rumor, as it has gotten him
laid any number of times. There is something so smart
and perverse (not to mention a little bit devious) in
Spacey's masquerading as a gay man in order to bed
women looking to "make a convert," that I can't help
but give the man his props. Would that more men (and
women) were as comfortable with a fluid sense of
masculinity and sexuality as Spacey.
Of course, this has nothing to do with Spacey's new
film, and is really only to let you know that I find
him personally intriguing, and, professionally, have
mostly been a fan of his work. His performances in
George Huang's Swimming with Sharks, David
Fincher's Se7en, and Bryan Singer's The
Usual Suspects were exemplary. And he even made
the generally awful L.A. Confidential and even
worse Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil a
bit more bearable. Then along came American
Beauty, which, despite all its accolades, was a
pretty smug and preachy little film. This was followed
by the abysmal Pay it Forward. (Helen Hunt and
Haley Joel Osment in the same film?! Pass the hemlock
please.)
This brings us up to date and up to K-PAX,
which unfortunately follows the general downward
trajectory of Spacey's recent career. In Iain
Softley's film adaptation of Gene Brewer's novel,
Spacey plays Prot (rhymes with "goat"), a very
human-looking man who claims to be from the far away,
titular planet of K-PAX. Shortly after arriving on
Earth (K-PAXians travel in some incorporeal form at
several times the speed of light), Prot is taken into
custody by police (for no real reason, other than
behaving "weirdly"), quickly judged insane, and
remanded to the Manhattan Institute of Psychiatric
Health and the custody of Dr. Mark Powell (Jeff
Bridges, who has played his own version of Prot in
Starman). It is up to Powell to decide "is he
or isn't he" (a space alien, not a homosexual). Of
course, the institutionally predetermined answer to
this is "he isn't," and Powell must figure out the
etiology of Prot's psychological distress and find a
cure.
Along the way, Powell's blind faith in psychiatry's
ability to answer all of life's big questions
is tested, and Prot begins to complicate the Doctor's
easy presumption of his insanity. Prot's stories of
life on K-PAX are incredibly detailed and incredibly
consistent, and he displays a knowledge of
astro-physics and quantum mechanics far beyond the
reach of ordinary humans, not to mention the most
advanced scientists. This provides the opportunity for
K-PAX to trot out all the old cliches about
humanity's barbarism, intolerance, and general
icky-ness. Yeah, we know, we're all a bunch of spoiled
brats.
Contrary to all its superficial criticism of human
inconsistency and smallness, however, K-PAX's
real insight is on how we in the United States
conceive of and treat mental illness; strangely, this
is an insight the film seems unaware that it is even
making. Here mental illness is a joke, played merely
for laughs. The Manhattan Institute is filled with
stock crazies who are all blubbery and buffoonish.
The film does try at times, though, to see mental
illness as reflective of social ills. One patient,
listed only as "Screaming Man" (Frank Collison),
relates how he came to the Institute after years of
working as a doorman at a posh Upper West Side
apartment building, and after he started to notice
that all the people coming and going from the building
"stank." You see, it's all about class; rich people
stink. At best, this is a facile use of mental illness
as social criticism, and it's totally undone by the
repeated use of Screaming Man's screaming at everyone
that they stink. While Prot's abstract waxing
philosophic on "human nature" is given plenty of
expression in the film, K- PAX's real social
commentary (on things like the relationships among
class, opportunity and psychological distress) is
downplayed and even dismissed by Screaming Man's
loony-bin antics. Presumably "we" can all agree we are
pretty bad as human beings, but we don't need to
consider too closely the specifics of how bad we can
be and often are to each other.
When these psychiatric patients aren't being played
for comedy, K-PAX reproduces a general and
traditional American social disdain for mental
illness, as in the film's easy dismissal of Screaming
Man and his fellow patients. The inmates are either
simply bothersome for the overburdened staff of the
institute, or they are exploited merely for the
edification of Dr. Powell, or else to advance his
career and the careers of his colleagues. And, of
course, the general tenor of the film is that Prot is
too smart to be crazy, that the "truths" he speaks are
(or seem) too universal to be the ramblings of a
madman.
He must be from outer space, rather than
"merely" an intelligent and creative man suffering the
aftereffects of severe mental trauma. Presumably, in
order for an audience to identify or sympathize with
Prot he must clearly not be insane, which brings us
back to how the film reflects a generalized U.S.
cultural phobia of and prejudice against mental
illness of any and all sorts. K-PAX is being
sold as something of a "feel-good" movie, but
ultimately its real message is "feel good that you are not mentally ill."