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Sunday, November 24, 2013

The Dallas Buyer's Club (4/5 Stars)



Ronald Woodruff wasn’t supposed to be the kind of guy that got AIDS. That was something homosexuals got, faggots as Ron would likely call them. He points to a fresh 1980s newspaper chronicling the death of Rock Hudson and decries the massive shame it was that Rock had access to all that Hollywood pussy and wasted the opportunity by being gay. AIDS was also something intravenous drug users got, and Ron Woodruff wasn’t that either. I mean he snorted cocaine and drank heavily and had unprotected sex with plenty of women (we are introduced to him via a threesome under the bleachers at a Texas rodeo), but none of that had anything to do with needles or homosexuality. So when Ron Woodruff passes out from a massive headache, wakes up in the hospital, and is told that he has a T-Cell count of 9 and 30 days left to live, he doesn’t believe it. “There’s nothing that can kill Ron Woodruff in 30 days,” he declares to the doctors and storms out of the hospital.

“Dallas Buyer’s Club,” directed by Jean-Marc Vallee attempts to do two things with the biographical story of Ronald Woodruff of Dallas, Texas. The first thing it does is demonstrate how his terminal illness and his subsequent business dealings with the gay community opened his eyes to society’s intolerance and indifference towards the “homosexual” AIDS epidemic and broke down his own prejudices. The second is an educational primer on the various drugs that were in the process of being approved by the FDA in response to the AIDS epidemic. One being AZT, a drug that is being championed by the FDA but the movie treats as a killer. The other drugs are the all-natural ones that Ron Woodruff starts peddling to the Dallas community. It was Ron’s unshakable belief (based not only the research he did but the anecdotal experience of taking every drug himself before selling it to anybody else) that his drugs, though they did not cure the disease (nothing could do that we learn), would be able to prolong life. They do this by merely making the body healthier in general, whereas AZT, sort of like chemotherapy, kills everything patient included. The movie does the first thing better than the second.

First things first: this year’s award in stunt acting goes to the acting team of Matthew McCounaaghey and Jared Leto, playing respectively Ronald Woodruff and Rayon, Ron’s transsexual business partner. Both have lost an incredible amount of weight for their roles. McCounaghey is perhaps more unrecognizable here being once upon a time People’s Sexiest Man Alive back when he had superfluous muscales and did nothing but dumb romantic comedies. It’s all gone now as if he has shed all the superficial romcom dumbness and what is left is the emaciated frame of a serious actor. To witness the turn in career choices that McCounaghey has accomplished over the last couple years is quite remarkable. “Dallas Buyer’s Club” is the capper. An Academy Award nomination would not be surprising. It is also a relief to witness the return of Jared Leto (Requiem from a Dream) after a five-year hiatus of pop stardom. In addition to slimming down he has put on a dress. The character Rayon apparently is not based on one real person but rather a composite of the gay community. It is an ingenious strategy concerning the age-old problem of capturing a lifetime within a two-hour frame. In this way, Ron’s changing attitude is reflected through his relationship with one particular person rather in several people and the emotional payoffs are far more effective.

I’m going to take a moment and throw in a political comment here, an indulgence I am happily allowed by writing an anonymous blog that nobody reads. “Dallas Buyer’s Club” is a great movie for the fan of Capitalism. Generally it has been said that Capitalism has no morals. But that is not necessarily true. The morals of Capitalism are honesty, equal treatment, and tolerance. A man may not like a person or a group of people, but if he is a true capitalist he will trade with that person for the right price. Racial segregation, Caste systems, exclusionary zoning, and ornerous governmental regulation: all are great enemies of Capitalism. The “Dallas Buyer’s Club” is a great example of how Capitalism transforms the prejudiced man who takes its ideals to heart. Ron Woodruff is above all else a hustler. When he sees that there is a market for unapproved Mexican drugs in Dallas, he sets out to exploit it with rational self-interest and what is born of the Dallas Buyers Club is an unambiguously good collaboration of buyers and sellers trying to help each other survive. Is it evidence that the Dallas Buyer’s Club was a good thing that helped people because Ron Woodruff was able to make money? Yes, yes it is. 

What is not dones too well is the movies’ treatment of AZT. This comes from the subtitle at the end of the movie. It states that: “A smaller dose of AZT combined with other drugs saved millions of lives.” Given the movie I just watched, that line does not make sense. I had just spent two hours watching Ron Woodruff declare that the doctors doling out AZT were murderors, a hospital administator played by Denis O’Hare (an actor that specializes in white collar sleaze) who cares more about money than good science, and a third doctor played by Jennifer Garner who is sympathetic to Woodruff’s cause and at one point is asked to resign because of it. So what is the deal with AZT? Why is the movie telling us with its last line that it works when it does not offer any evidence to suggest that from in the movie? This is the sort of detail that makes the watcher feel the need to look up on Wikipedia the true story, which I have not done yet because I wanted my confusion to be readily apparent in this review.

In cases like this, I always bring up that Oliver Stone anecdote. He was accused of propaganda and his reply was this: how can you tell that my movies are not propaganda? Because they aren’t boring. Propaganda by definition only shows one point of view, and because of that necessary lack of conflict, it is not exciting. A storyteller may have a point of view. A storyteller may have an agenda. But if that storyteller does not give the other side its full due, the story will not be exciting. “Dallas Buyer’s Club,” has this problem. By the end, we see Ron Woodruff time and again being victimized unjustly by the system for arbitrary reasons. The reasons may have been stupid for all I know, but what I do know from watching the movie is that the other side is not getting a fair shake. They are not given the chance to explain themselves. We see plenty of scenes of Jennifer Garner trying to persuade Denis O’Hare of the ineffectiveness of AZT. Instead of giving Denis the opporutunity to respond, the movie simply has him ignore Jennifer. In the end, we are left with only one side of the argument, and because of that the epitath does not make sense.

What is the truth? I’m afraid you may have to do your own research.  

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