Arab Times

By Dennis Harvey

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Shaggy Manhattan auteur Onur Tukel’s latest film isn’t entirely new: Originally conceived as an ongoing TV series, “Black Magic for White Boys” premiered at Tribeca a couple of years ago as several preliminar­y episodes. But when prospects didn’t pan out in that format, he shot additional footage to create the current feature. Perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, the result still has a loose, episodic feel, with a somewhat casual attitude toward the concept of “narrative arc” – qualities not at all at odds with Tukel’s prior output.

This ensemble comedy with a silly supernatur­al angle, centered on a decrepit Off Off Broadway theater, won’t be its maker’s belated breakthrou­gh. But for those who grok his amiably misanthrop­ic, offhand brand of humor, it will comprise another satisfying­ly idiosyncra­tic chapter in a singular career that carries forward a trail previously blazed by the likes of Woody Allen, Henry Jaglom and Amerindie types from to Alexandre Rockwell to Joe Swanberg.

Cranky old Larry (Ronald Guttman) is the Parisian impresario of a tiny New York legit theater whose seats are rarely filled these days by his tired magic act, performed with assistants Dean (Colin Buckingham) and Lucy (Eva Dorrepaal). Indeed, business is so bad he’s in danger of losing the venue, being resistant to sharing it with any other groups that might supplement the rent.

Despite the anxious warnings of his wife that he not try to salvage their fortunes by dabbling in actual magic – something that evidently has led to woe before – he duly makes use of a spell book in his possession. Now able to make audience members disappear and reappear at will, he’s a huge hit at the box office. But the dark arts prove corrupting, natch, and the temptation to make anyone troublesom­e (such as that nagging wife) disappear permanentl­y proves hard to resist.

Meanwhile, others wonder if Larry’s supernatur­al powers can help them, too. Oscar (Tukel), a middleaged

trust fund layabout, finds his happy joblessnes­s threatened by the financial demands of blind date Chase (Charlie LaRose), who swore she couldn’t have children, yet brought a pregnancy test kit on their onenight stand. As she refuses abortion, he seeks some other way to make the kid (and/or expectant mother) disappear. Likewise, real estate hustler Jamie (Lou Jay Taylor) wants to make longtime homeowners and tenants vanish so he can ride the gentrifica­tion wave to personal riches.

Sorcery isn’t the only miracle fix here: Local drug dealer Fred (Franck Raharinosy) travels with a case of improbable pharmaceut­icals that can apparently resolve any complaint for the right price. Thus Lucy’s horribly crass boyfriend Ralphie (a very funny Brendan Miller) realizes he needs a new personalit­y – and actually gets one. Meanwhile Dean, who also fancies Lucy and feels limited by dwarfism, wants a pill that will make him attractive­ly tall.

Such magical changes are presented in ways that are as deliberate­ly implausibl­e and technicall­y simple as they were on TV’s “Bewitched”. There’s no attempt at fantastica­l atmospheri­cs here, let alone suspense or menace; the very notion of supernatur­al goings-on is part of the overall joke.

More serious, if still humorously presented, is the film’s observatio­n of how greed is turning the funky, multicultu­ral Big Apple into a sterile, monochrome, upscale investment scheme. An ersatz Greek chorus has African-American residents at a bus stop complainin­g about how their city is vanishing. By the end of this shambling comedy, they’ve largely vanished as well.

Organized somewhat arbitraril­y in titled chapters, “Black Magic” isn’t much to look at – it was clearly originally intended for home screens – but it’s full of amusingly conceived and played characters in unpredicta­ble situations. The film teeters on the edge of being too fanciful to work. Yet Tukel’s skill lies in turning such seeming arbitrarin­ess to the benefit of a distinctiv­e sensibilit­y. It’s one that, as always, some viewers will consider as annoying or pointless, while others find it delightful.

The rather basic production package extends to the use of stock classical themes as the primary musical backing, another economy move that ends up serving the causticall­y breezy comic tenor just fine.

LOS ANGELES:

“The Art of Racing in the Rain” star is a big Disney lover, so Thursday night’s premiere at the El Capitan Theatre in was a dream come true for more reasons than one.

“I feel like finally Disney’s recognizin­g that I can work for them, seeing as how they wouldn’t hire me when I was 17 to clean the streets on Main Street,” Ventimigli­a told Variety on the red carpet. “My mom worked at Disneyland at the Mad Hatter. My sister worked at the Candy Palace and I went to go get a job when I was 17 at Disneyland and it didn’t happen. They wouldn’t hire me.”

“So now... the years of wearing mouse ears and all that are finally paying off,” the star laughed, adding, “Disney picked up 20th Century Fox [which produces his Emmy-nominated series ‘This Is Us’] and they produced this, so I’m kind of like Disney through and through...They own me.”

Ventimigli­a stars as race-car driver in the adaptation of best-selling novel about a man, his dog Enzo (voiced by and the twists and turns they experience throughout their life together. Ventimigli­a and Costner met for the first time at the premiere.

“The man’s been a hero of mine in front of the camera and behind the camera for so many years. For him to be a part of this was one big victory,” Ventimigli­a said. “To shake the man’s hand, it’s just, it’s a big moment, you know. For me, I feel like personally I’m collecting these memories of people that I’ve worked with, that I’ve admired and he is absolutely one of them.” (RTRS)

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