Short Time
Dir: Gregg Champion
1990
****
Short Time is one of
those wonderful cop comedies that acts as a good example of the switch in style
between decades. I feels very much like an 80s comedy but there is something a
little grown up and 90s about it. It’s a favourite of mine, although it flew
under the radar and hardly ever gets mentioned. It deals with a man
reconnecting with his own life, thanks to a string of over the top
misunderstandings, which is very much an 80s idea but with Short Time, there is
a strong element of believability, a strange sort of authenticity that most
goofy comedies don’t possess. The brilliant Dabney Coleman plays Seattle
Detective Burt Simpson, a neurotic man who feels less and less connected to his
family due to financial worries and preparing for a better future while being
only a few years away from retirement. After a mix up at the hospital were
Simpson goes in for a routine check, he is told that he has only a couple of
weeks to live. His blood samples were switched by a dope-smoking bus driver who
was worried his sample would reveal his drug habit and lose him his job. Shocked
by this information, Simpson looks into his opinions and finds that his life policy
isn’t much when dying early of natural causes. However, a further research, he
learns that dying in the line of duty pays quite handsomely, so with his wife
and son’s future in mind, he takes every dangerous call that comes across the
police radio. He answers certain calls based on the statistical probability that
the incidents in question will escalate and lead to probable danger. Unfortunately,
Simpson’s new look on life, or what he thinks he has left of it, seems to help
him react to the situations he finds himself in. The comedy-filled scenarios
all reach positive conclusions, and instead of being killed in action, Simpson
is awarded an array of bravery medals. He only discovers the truth of his
condition when on a particularly dangerous mission involving a heavily armed
Xander Berkeley, loose scaffold and the top of a skyscraper. Like I said, the
premise couldn’t be more 1980s comedy. However, what makes the film so great is
probably what also kept it away from the top at the box office. There was tough
competition the week it came out but also Dabney Coleman wasn’t Tom Hanks. He’s
better in my opinion and everyone who loves Short Time (and there are fanatics
like my out there who do) love it because of Coleman but at the time film’s
needed big name stars. It is an amazing lead performance, comical but always somewhat
serious. The last scene is incredibly touching too, albeit overlooked. The
character was called Burt as a joke because his partner was called Ernie.
However, the first Simpsons short film came on before Short Time in cinemas, so
now everyone thinks he was named after Bart Simpson, which isn’t the case. I
think the tag line: ‘Getting Killed isn’t as easy as it looks’ might have also
put people off but I still can’t understand how the film hasn’t been
rediscovered all these years later. It’s a forgotten classic, really funny,
very exciting and also rather touching.
No comments:
Post a Comment