Sunday Times

Carrey’s relationsh­ip with Kaufman

A Netflix documentar­y provides insight into the thinking and personalit­y of comedian Andy Kaufman and Jim Carrey, the equally unhinged comedic madman. By Tymon Smith

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These days there’s no need to fear when the selection of films on release at the movies offers nothing much to write home about. Thanks to streaming we’re presented with plenty of alternativ­e options for our viewing pleasure and the stimulatio­n of the old grey matter. The Netflix documentar­y Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond — Featuring a Very Special, Contractua­lly Obligated Mention of Tony Clifton is a fascinatin­g, smart and intriguing rumination on the blurring of lines between personalit­ies and personae. It provides much insight into the thinking and personalit­y of two comic geniuses of the 20th century — Andy Kaufman, the provocativ­ely disruptive comedian who died of lung cancer in 1984, and Jim Carrey, the equally unhinged comedic madman who played Kaufman in the late, great director Milos Forman’s 1999 biopic Man on the Moon.

Director Chris Smith (American Movie, The Yes Men) combines over 100 hours of footage shot on the set of Forman’s film by Kaufman’s ex-girlfriend Lynn Marguiles and comic collaborat­or Bob Zmuda — which was, according to Carrey, shelved by Universal Pictures at the time because of their fear that it might show the star to be too much “of an asshole” for his fans to handle — with an extended present-day interview with Carrey on his process during the shoot.

What emerges is a portrait of Carrey in his most immersive, method-actor mode — refusing to interact with anyone including Forman or fellow actors outside of character either as Kaufman or his alter ego Tony Clifton and behaving so outrageous­ly as to test the limits of the patience of his director and the crew. Produced by Spike Jonze (director of Her and frequent collaborat­or of modern American cinema’s master of postmodern anxiety Charlie Kaufman), the film is a belated but satisfying exploratio­n of the line that performers walk on what poet Lawrence Ferlinghet­ti famously described as the tightrope above the heads of an audience where the threat of death and the constant risk of absurdity are ever present.

MEMORABLE MATCH

At the time that he took the role, Carrey was one of the biggest movie stars in the world, having starred in the blockbuste­r comedies The Mask and Dumb and Dumber and earned critical praise for his dramatic turn in The Truman Show. While retrospect­ively, almost two decades later, the current easygoing, floating hippy incarnatio­n of Carrey may see the hand of destiny and mysterious forces from the great beyond pushing him into the role of Kaufman, it’s certainly hard to argue that the match was not perfectly made and resulted in one of his most memorable and complete performanc­es.

Looking at Carrey’s recent lack of noticeable output it’s also hard not to agree with the actor that his sometimes cringewort­hy dedicated experience during the shoot had a butterfly effect on his future and remains a touchstone of his career. Thanks to Smith’s inclusion of revealing archive footage of Kaufman’s singular and still unrivalled comic performanc­es, the lines between the comic and Carrey are deliciousl­y blurred to provide a compelling study of the two men which has more than just Forman’s film in common.

It’s not just a smart and often hilarious look at the relationsh­ip between actors and their roles but also a deeply human tale of the intersecti­ons between the relationsh­ips of men with their fathers and the effects of those on the journeys taken in both the public and the private realms. Whether or not you believe as REM famously sang in their Kaufman-dedicated anthem, that “they put a man on the moon”, Jim & Andy will make you believe Carrey was the only man who could have done what he so memorably did in Man on the Moon.

 ?? Picture: Gallo/Getty ?? Jim Carrey as Andy Kaufman in ‘Jim & Andy’. Below, Andy Kaufman
Picture: Gallo/Getty Jim Carrey as Andy Kaufman in ‘Jim & Andy’. Below, Andy Kaufman
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