Review by by Anne Daugherty
Movies are such a vital part of our culture. We go to the cinema, we rent
videos, and even basic cable provides one or two movies at any given point
in every day. So it's getting downright crowded out there in movie land, and
therefore harder and harder to come up with something original. Three to
Tango doesn't even try. Instead it employs the old traditional boy meets
girl plot and goes little from there. In this case the boy is Oscar Novak,
played by Matthew Perry, who proves yet again that what we see in Friends is
all he has to offer. Chandler's goofy slapstick and athletic eyebrows are
obviously the only tricks in Perry's book, so they get used again and again.
Still, he is cute, and since Three to Tango relies so heavily on eye candy,
you could do worse. At least Perry doesn't pretend to be a great actor; he's
a pretty face and that's enough.
The object of Oscar's affection is Amy (Neve Campbell). She's an artist; in
fact, she's a glass blower, and a pretty good one. Oscar and Amy meet via
one of many serious plot holes that damage the smooth voyage of this film.
As young, attractive, and successful as Amy is, she's involved with
Chicago's latest multi-millionaire, Charles Newman (played most
unconvincingly by Dylan McDermott). When I say played unconvincingly, I
really think that poor McDermott is a sacrificial lamb in this movie. His
role is dumb dumb dumb, which leaves no room for maneuvering. Paul Newman
couldn't make this role happen, but then again, Paul Newman would have the
brains not to take it in the first place.
Anyway, Amy is Charles' mistress. Charles needs some architects to remodel a
building, and hires Oscar and his partner, Peter (Oliver Platt), for the
job. Thinking Oscar is gay, Charles asks him to spy on Amy, to make sure
she's not seeing other men. Amy and Oscar fall in love, but they hide their
feelings and fight repeatedly, though you know that the truth will
inevitably come out in a huge arena where boy will risk all in front of
millions to tell his girl the truth. And in the meantime, said boy will of
course manage to sermonize on the state of the world, as if he knows more
about living a lie in his 5 minutes of gayness than others do in a lifetime
of the reverse. It's almost as annoying as the scene in Tootsie where Dustin
Hoffman tells women what it means to be female. Hey, thanks, Dustin, boy, we
sure didn't know that until you told us!!!
While Three to Tango is all very entertaining in its inane way, there's a
certain discomfort to the film that is hard to shake. The movie hangs on the
premise that Oscar is gay when he really isn't. A premise that is
established in a stupid way, and upheld with even less plausibility. In
fact, there are many moments when even the most politically incorrect
viewers would have to feel uncomfortable with the tasteless and cheap shots
taken at the gay community. For all that, it's just a romantic comedy after
all, meant to numb the senses and allowing the audience to indulge itself in
identifying as hero or heroine of a life that is far removed from reality.
And it does have a rather cool swing score that keeps the toes tapping.
PopMatters Film Critic
http://www.popmatters.com/film/reviews/t/three-to-tango.html
Three to
Tango
Director: Damon Santostefano
Cast: Matthew Perry, Neve Campbell, Dylan McDermott