Rating: PG
Genre:
Comedy
Release Date: 11/06/2001
SubTitles: English/French/Espanol
Dubbed: English
Sound: 5.1/1
Run Time: 79 Minutes
Flags: Adult Situations, Questionable for Children, Adult Language, Adult Humor
Distributor/Studio: MGM
Leonard Zelig, the "human chameleon", is profiled in this mock-documentary. Director
Woody Allen appears as Zelig in scenes that purport to be vintage newsreel clips of the 1920s and 1930s, but are actually clever recreations, "aged" and scratched-up
Citizen Kane-style by special-effects maestros
Joel Hynick,
Stuart Robinson and
R. Greenberg Associates. An appropriately pompous narrator details the life and times of Leonard Zelig, whose overwhelming desire for conformity is manifested in his ability to take on the facial and vocal characteristics of whomever he happens to be around at the moment. He shows up at batting practice with
Babe Ruth, among
William Randolph Hearst's guests as San Simeon, side by side with
Pope Pius at the Vatican, and peering anxiously over the shoulder of
Adolf Hitler at the Nuremberg Rally. Becoming a celebrity in his own right, Zelig inspires a song, a dance craze, and a
Warner Bros. biopic.
Mia Farrow plays Dr. Eudora Fletcher , a psychiatrist who tries to "reach" Zelig and ultimately falls in love with him (all of
Farrow's scenes are in black-and-white and allegedly culled from archive footage;
Ellen Garrison, whose resemblance to
Farrow is uncanny, plays the older Dr. Fletcher in the interview sequences). In the manner of
Reds, the influence of the fictional Leonard Zelig on popular culture is discussed by such real-life notables as
Susan Sontag,
Irving Howe,
Saul Bellow and
Dr. Bruno Bettenheim.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide