James Dean

James Franco, James Dean
Photo: James Dean: Doug Hyun

James Dean, directed by Mark Rydell and starring James Franco, begins with the actor throwing Raymond Massey (portrayed by ”Gilmore Girls”’ Edward Herrmann) for a loop during the filming of 1955’s ”East of Eden” by insulting the older actor off screen. ”I offended him — good,” says Dean to director Elia Kazan (”Just Shoot Me”’s Enrico Colantoni, in a shrewdly avid performance). ”Why ‘good’?” asks Kazan. ”’Cause I need him to hate me [on screen],” snaps Dean. It’s an effective, if crude, way to introduce young viewers to Dean’s Method acting style, in which real emotions are summoned up in performance.

Franco starred as the chief hood, or ”freak,” in NBC’s wonderful 1999 drama ”Freaks and Geeks,” and he’s got Dean’s sunken cheekbones and hooded glare. Franco could have walked through the role and done a passable Dean, but instead gets under the skin of this insecure, rootless young man. (Dean’s mother died when he was 9; his cold father — played with frost on his vocal cords by Michael Moriarty — never approved of his profession.) The script for ”James Dean,” by playwright Israel Horovitz, indulges in some pat psychoanalysis — Dean is shown withdrawing from George Stevens (Craig Barnett), director of Dean’s last movie, 1956’s ”Giant,” because, the actor says, Stevens ”reminded me of my father” — but Horovitz otherwise avoids standard clunky biopic dialogue.

Rydell has had an uneven career directing feature films, including everything from ”The Rose” (1979), Bette Midler’s best screen vehicle, to 1972’s ”The Cowboys,” a John Wayne film that Pauline Kael succinctly demolished as ”pious muck.” He’s probably a better actor than a director — no one who’s seen him as the crazy slimeball who smashes a girl’s face with a shot glass in Robert Altman’s ”The Long Goodbye” (1973) could ever forget him — and in ”James Dean,” he takes the juicy role of studio boss Jack Warner.

Rydell’s Warner is a power loving philistine who hates Dean’s arrogance, partly because he doesn’t understand the kid’s weird angst and partly because it challenges his own arrogance: For Dean to have become a huge star in 1955’s ”Rebel Without a Cause” was, Rydell makes clear as both actor and director, a threat to movie barons like Warner. How could they keep unreliable but creative oddballs like Dean and Dean’s heroes, Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift, in front of their adoring public while still maintaining control over their stars’ images? (Warner/Rydell goes wonderfully apoplectic when Dean gives a movie magazine a quote suggesting he may be bisexual.)

Dean obliged such Hollywood establishment unease by dying in a car crash in 1955. Rydell’s movie concludes with the words ”Most of this film was based on fact; some was an educated guess.” This summer more than ever, we know that artistic guesswork nearly always trumps trite reality.

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