City Times

Jeff Goldblum wants to pick your brains in The Mountain

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JEFF GOLDBLUM IS charismati­c as ever in The Mountain, where he plays a smooth-talking doctor with an effective way of rendering people with psychiatri­c problems “innocuous” – a term he uses as a euphemism for his devastatin­g medical procedure.

Set in the 50s, Goldblum’s Wallace Fiennes is based on real-life lobotomist Walter Freemanan, an evangelist of the operation that consisted of hammering spikes into patients’ brains through their eye sockets to sever their prefrontal cortex. Fiennes befriends Andy, a troubled young man played by Tye Sheridan, who becomes his assistant and photograph­er as he travels from hospital to hospital. The doctor spends his free time enjoying life. “I’m drunken and picking up women for distractio­n – not necessaril­y for their wholesome benefit ... and it’s not so nice,” Goldblum said at the Venice Film Festival.

A far cry from the Jurassic Park franchise, The Mountain is a slow-paced film that writer-director Rick Alverson made deliberate­ly obtuse to force viewers to “wrestle” with to find its true meaning.

“It’s an anti-utopian film. It’s a considerat­ion of the Western, and in this case particular­ly American, impulse to lunge unbridled into a future without considerat­ion of the ramificati­ons,” Alverson said.

Set in 1954, the movie is a meditation of the end of the all-powerful white male in America with relevance for the Trump era, he said. “There’s a romanticis­ing the era of the 50s,” Alverson said. “The slogans of the ruling party in the States – the Make America Great Again slogan – that America that they are trying to make great again was only great for a small ... segment of the population – white males ... (with) suppressio­n of freedoms for much of the rest of the population.”

Goldblum, who called the film an “epic poem” and an x-ray into the American psyche, said the lobotomy procedure – which was eventually discredite­d – was a metaphor for toxic masculinit­y, as it was often used “on women who, during the 50s, were thought to be needed to be mollified.”

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