Jake Paltrow’s film, The Good Night, is about a young
musician called Gary (Martin Freeman) who was once a member of —
possibly the musical intelligence behind — a moderately well-known
rock band. But that’s long past. Now he is reduced to writing
commercial jingles for his more successful ex-band mate, Paul
(Simon Pegg), who is a partner in a big advertising agency. Gary is
both artistically frustrated and depressed because he has a
nagging, hypercritical girlfriend called Dora (Gwyneth Paltrow) who
wants him to be more of a go-getter, like Paul. After dreaming of a
beautiful stranger named Anna (Penelope Cruz) who is his idea —
and pretty much any man’s idea — of romantic and sexual
perfection, Gary seeks to take up permanent residence in his dreams
by seeking out Mel (Danny DeVito), a self-proclaimed expert on what
he calls “lucid dreaming.”
Well, it’s not as bad as it sounds. In fact, in some ways it is
quite good. Much of the writing, also by Mr. Paltrow, is sharp and
witty, and he is blessed with a terrific cast whose sense of comic
timing adds appreciably to the laugh-total. It is possible to enjoy
almost everything about the movie except for its meaning. Or rather
its lack of meaning. For ultimately, Mr. Paltrow allows his dream
world to fight the real world to a standstill, as if Gary’s
preference for living in his dreams really could be something other
than a childish delusion and a moral defect — as if there were
some real consolation and not just a postmodern mannerism in the
conceit that we can take refuge from unhappy realities in
fantasy.
Not that Mr. Paltrow is alone in taking — or affecting to take
— this idea seriously. For a long time, powerful voices in the
culture have been insisting on the rights of artistic fantasies to
be treated on equal terms with artistic representations of reality.
In the modish critical language of today, we are supposed (some
think) not to “privilege” reality over fantasy. “It is…the
freedom to interpret that makes art art,” Julie Taymore recently
told an interviewer, who added: “and she agrees absolutely with
Kurosawa’s contention that there is no such thing as ‘the truth.’”
The reasoning seems to be that since there is no truth anyway —
or, as Kurosawa would more likely have put it, if the truth is
unknowable — reality has no right snobbishly to look down its nose
at fantasy as something inferior. Both are just somebody’s version
of the truth.
In fact we all know that this, the pretense of an equality
between the two, is itself the ultimate in fantasy. People who
can’t tell reality from fantasy are insane, and however much some
people enjoy pretending to be insane in order to amuse us, they’re
really not — and neither are they, in the end, very amusing. By
pretending to treat fantasy as a rational alternative to reality,
The Good Night ends up trivializing tragedy — both a
literal tragedy and what it portends, which is the tragic inability
of our wishes and desires to prevail against the adamantine
otherness of reality.