At The Movies Actor Peter Berg turns filmmaker with "Very Bad Things." A SERENEA DONADONI Special to The Jewish News ctor turned writer/director Peter Berg calls his debut film Very Bad Things. Believe him. This black comedy follows a group of white col- lar, suburban thirtysomething guys (Christian Slater, Daniel Stern, Jeremy Piven, Leland Orser) who take their friend Kyle (Jon Favreau) to Las Vegas for a bachelor parry a few days before his wedding to Laura (Cameron Diaz). Once in Vegas, they frantically indulge in booze, drugs and frat boy testosterone games. But when a prosti- tute is accidentally killed, these old friends collectively decide not to call the police, and they head down a slip- pery slope that's steeper than they could have ever imagined. You make these little mistakes in your life," explained Berg at the 1998 Toronto International Film Festival. "They can add up, and before you know it, you're in a world of hell. That was a broad theme I wanted to explore. That being said, my personality's pretty extreme. I wanted ro entertain, I wanted to spin a yarn, and I wanted to whack people a little bit." As an actor, the 34-year-old Berg is best known for his role as the rough- around-the-edges working-class Dr. Billy Kronk on CBS's "Chicago Hope" and Linda Fiorentino's dim-witted patsy in The Last Seduction. His resume also includes starring roles in less than stellar Hollywood fare like Aspen Extreme and The Great White Hype. But Berg describes his own "com- fortable" background as being closer to the characters in Very Bad Things, and he initially planned on playing the role of Kyle himself. His producers discouraged Berg, advising him to concentrate on directing. "A young Dustin Hoffman would have been great," Berg said. "That's what I wanted: someone that was kind of neurotic but kind of cool, kind of malleable but kind of strong. But there's just not a lot of actors like that in Hollywood today." He subsequently re- watched Swingers, and when he saw the phone call scene, when Jon Favreau leaves a series of increasingly hysteri- cal messages on the answering machine of a girl he just met," Berg "knew he was the guy." While Christ- ian Slater and Cameron Diaz are bigger box office names, the part Favreau plays in Very Bad Things is the film's , m oral cen- ter, if it can be said to have one. (Jeremy Piven and Daniel Stern play brothers, ostensibly Jewish, who like the other characters are "disconnected Clockwise from top: Adam (Daniel Stern), Laura from anything (Cameron Diaz), Kyle (Jon Favreau), Charles (Leland spiritual," says Orser), Michael (Jeremy Piven) and Robert (Christian Berg.) Slater) in "Very Bad Things," a savage comedy about five "The big chal- friends who turn on each other after a bachelor party lenge for me was to be a character that Favreau, who is equally at ease on you could relate to throughout the both sides of the camera, was whole film," explained Favreau. impressed with Berg's abilities as a "Starting him off as very accessible writer and director. and then taking baby steps down that "He gives an emotional state and road, people can relate to where the consistency to the characters," said characters are. By the time [a fatally Favreau. "A lot of independent film injured hotel security guard is] bang- makers who are just writers want to ing on the door trying to get out of show off how smart they are, and so as the bathroom, and everybody's got a a result, you have [characters] all say- hand on the door, the audience feels ing very clever things, probably more they have a hand on the door, too." clever than they should. Here, it's very might work if Springer wasn't exploiting these people for cheap laughs and snickers. Filmed on the production value level of a wrestling match, Ringmaster tells the story of those who call the show's 1-800 line to appear on national television and bare their souls. In reality, their motivation appears to be a free round-trip to Los Angeles. Granted, Ringmaster may appeal to the millions of folks who put out good money for the videos of X- rated outtakes from the "Jerry Springer Show." 0 from Detroit and the muscu- This is just more of the same, although lar stud Nvtlo has been having with paid actors. sex with all of them. Take the oversexed When both groups arrive 0 Trailer Park Babes. 0 together at the same LA C- The daughter is hotel, you can guess what sleeping with her happens. Then everyone goes on Jerry's show and starts stepfather, who has impregnated her. slugging away. J erry Springer as talk- When mom catches Although Ringmaster at show ost ferry Farrelly. times laughingly tries for a them in the act, she cinema verite documentary seduces her daugh- style, it is nothing more than a real ter's dim-witted fiance. Eventually, Thanks giving turkey. all four depart for L.A. to tell their story on "The Jerry Show." — Reviewed by Alan Abrams Also en route are three women " Director Peter Berg I Ring master " " s Jerry Springer trying to justi- fy his television success by star- ring in this movie bomb? Ringmaster tries to rake the high road by letting Springer, as talk- show host Jerry Farrelly, "talmudical- V explain why we shouldn't sit in judgment upon lowlifes. Given our insatiable fascination for details about the sex lives of the rich and famous, his take is that we don't like these people because they're not wealthy and powerful. That pop psychology ir • 0 0 ❑ • ". . 11/27 1998 Detroit Jewish News 106