Talking To The Screen
Velocity of Gary :2001
I first heard about this flick while flipping through the Village Voice while waiting online to go to a free preview in New York. I had been a Salma Hayek fan since 'Desperado' and 'From Dusk til Dawn', and was excited to see her in a smaller movie, something with more feeling. Vincent D'Onofrio is a character actor among character actors who first caught my (and everybody else's) eye in 'Full Metal Jacket'. Naturally this flick piqued my interest. Now that I've told my admiration for two of the three stars of 'The Velocity of Gary' (not to neglect Thomas Jane, the third star, I hadn't heard of him before this), I feel comfortable panning this movie without dishing out too much disrespect. I've never been so bored with a Gen-X lower east side NYC story. Let me set the stage briefly. Vincent D'Onofrio plays an ex-porn star, Valentino. He's dating Mary Carmen (Salma Hayek), the waitress at the local Twin Donut. Valentino is also dating Gary (Thomas Jane), quintessential gay heartthrob. This novel love triangle lends itself to some really nice conflict between the three players. By the time the film opens the three are already comfortable with this "menage e what?". There are some (not enough, in my opinion) flashback scenes showing the resolution between Mary Carmen and Gary, so it's not completely farfetched. There are some other truly charming downtown characters that decorate the movie so nicely: Two black transvestites who harass the squares, Ethan Hawk as the owner of a tattoo parlor next to the Twin Donut, a deaf transvestite who lip syncs to Patsy Cline, and a surprise role for Olivia D'Abo, Kevin's older sister from the Wonder Years. So far, so good, right? Then it turns out that Valentino has AIDS, and a lovely setup is ruined. All the wonderful characters disappear leaving Mary Carmen and Gary fighting over how to care for a dying Valentino. They fight over what food they have in the house and when rent is due. "Didn't we pay that last month?" Long gone is the passion, the pace, all we are left with are some Dracula references and disintegrating man. One highlight though. Look for Salma Hayek as Diana Ross lip-syncing "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" in the Halloween scene. Very much fun. I appreciate that it's difficult to keep the story of a man slowly dying interesting. But really, why make a pointless slow movie when you have such beauty in Hayek, and talent in D'Onofrio at your fingertips. All in all, this is not as effective or relevant an AIDS drama as 'Philadelphia'.