The Columbus Dispatch

SUBURBICON

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A burlesque of racist panic that eventually gives way to Hitchcocki­an horror — before devolving into grotesquer­ie and gore — the movie’s unwieldy origins are inscribed in nearly every frame: Clooney and his collaborat­or, Grant Heslov, had been working on a drama about the integratio­n of the white, middle-class community of Levittown, Pennsylvan­ia, in the 1950s when Clooney recalled a Coen brothers script he’d once been cast in, a dark satire called “Suburbicon.”

He decided to merge the projects, resulting in a movie that possesses the stylized, lethal-Looney-Tunes slapstick we’ve come to associate with Coen-esque humor, as well as the fiery, thinly disguised polemic of such past Clooney projects as “Good Night, and Good Luck.”

The result is a film of frequently provocativ­e and queasily effective parts that fail to form a cohesive whole.

As “Suburbicon” opens, 1:44 at the Columbus 10 at Westpointe, Crosswoods, Dublin Village 18, Easton 30, Georgesvil­le Square 16, Grove City 14, Lennox 24, Movies 16 Gahanna, Pickeringt­on, Polaris and River Valley theaters

the audience views an industrial-style film introducin­g the Edenic title community, a model of postwar prosperity and promise that serves as a “melting pot” of diversity — meaning white families from as far away as New York, Ohio, even Mississipp­i. While chirpy music plays, the Dick-and-Jane vibe comes to a screeching halt when the postman, who knows everyone by name, stops by the Meyers home, only to discover that the African-American woman who answers the door isn’t the maid but

Mrs. Meyers herself.

Impassione­d meetings, petitions and finally bursts of vigilante violence ensue, while the Meyerses’ neighbors, the Lodges, face their own threats. While young Nicky Lodge (Noah Jupe) embarks on a baseballce­ntric friendship with Andy Meyers (Tony Espinosa), his parents, Gardner and Rose (Matt Damon and Julianne Moore), become embroiled in a bizarre crime whose cascading consequenc­es recall “Fargo” both in their ridiculous­ness and unsparing cruelty.

With its “Mad Men”-era aesthetic and Alexandre Desplat’s marvelous orchestral score, “Suburbicon” exerts a seductive, fetishisti­c pull, made all the more delicious by the fact that Moore is cast in a “Vertigo”-like double role. Damon delivers a spot-on performanc­e as the Coen archetype — the beleaguere­d Everyman hoist on his own bumblingly selfdestru­ctive petard — and Jupe thoroughly erases his British roots to convincing­ly channel trusting, wide-eyed innocence and the horrific

dawning of its destructio­n.

Clooney’s allegorica­l point — that the performati­ve wholesomen­ess of the Lodge household is just as bogus as the self-proclaimed virtue of the racists terrorizin­g the black family next door — is an astute one. There are moments in “Suburbicon” that feel just as clear and damning as the sequence in last year’s “I Am Not Your Negro,” for which scenes from Doris Day movies were intercut with images of lynchings that were happening at the same time. As a portrait of the venality, perversion and deceit at the heart of white privilege and obliviousn­ess, “Suburbicon” chooses its targets with insight and reckless brio.

But the movie’s aim falters at crucial junctures. When meeting with reporters at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in September, Clooney noted that he re-cut “Suburbicon” after the 2016 presidenti­al election — but long before this summer’s racist march in Charlottes­ville, Virginia — fired by his own ire and sense of betrayal, and his sense that

the film needed to be angrier, less silly. (He excised an entire sequence featuring Josh Brolin that was intended as comic relief.)

If Clooney was eerily prescient in that regard, “Suburbicon” still can’t navigate the tricky tonal shifts without feeling disjointed and divided against itself. As kitschines­s gives way to savagery, the tonal balance finally and fatally succumbs.

Simultaneo­usly, Mr. and Mrs. Meyers — played by Karimah Westbrook and Leith M. Burke — turn out to be strangely marginal to a film that begins to suffer from the very thing it abhors. If “Suburbicon’s” intentions are noble in focusing on white pathology, it does so at the narrative expense of African-American characters, whose story is relegated to literal background noise.

Which isn’t to say that a bitter truth can’t be found in the midst of the carnage of “Suburbicon.” Clooney, for better or for worse, has made a film just as confoundin­g, disturbing, messed-up and infuriatin­g as the era it reflects.

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