By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
Movie review: Franco's heartfelt 'Disaster Artist' tells the wacky story behind 2003 cult hit 'The R
0614c62996f6ff12a0b8961c57e7fa45d9a034d1b4724698c30579781c04aaea
James Franco in "The Disaster Artist." - photo by Josh Terry
THE DISASTER ARTIST 3 stars James Franco, Dave Franco, Ari Graynor, Seth Rogen, Zac Efron; R (language throughout and some sexuality/nudity); in general release

By the end of James Francos The Disaster Artist, you may wonder if a spectacular failure is ultimately preferable to forgettable mediocrity.

The Disaster Artist is the story behind The Room, one of the most infamous cult movies of the 21st century that is widely regarded as the worst movie ever made. Like Tim Burtons Ed Wood, Franco builds his film around a tortured and enigmatic artist who is adorable, relatable and catastrophically incompetent.

In The Disaster Artist, that artist is Tommy Wiseau, a lanky, creepy enigma with an inexplicable pool of wealth at his disposal. With his stringy jet-black hair and cryptic eastern European accent even though he adamantly insists hes from New Orleans Tommy embodies what one character in the film describes as a malevolent presence, better suited to the villain role instead of the heroic spotlight he desires.

The story picks up in 1998 as Tommy (played by Franco) meets Greg Sestero (played by Francos brother Dave), a nave 19-year-old aspiring actor who cant get over his shyness issues. They meet in a San Francisco acting class, where Greg is stunned by Tommys willingness to bear his soul on demand. They bond on a spontaneous road trip to visit the spot where James Dean died and decide to head off to Hollywood together to pursue their dreams.

Sadly, those dreams are met by a relentless stream of rejection, which leads to a Ghostbusters-style epiphany when Greg and Tommy decide to circumvent the heartless Hollywood establishment and just make a movie on their own. Tommy produces a script, ambiguously titled The Room, and production begins in 2002.

Most of The Disaster Artist follows the production of the ill-fated film, which proves to be a semi-biographical vanity project for Tommy, who also directs, produces, stars as the lead character Johnny and seems strangely determined to get his bare backside on screen.

Greg winds up with the role of Mark, Johnnys best friend, who is sleeping with Johnnys girlfriend Lisa (Ari Graynor). As production moves along, you get the feeling that the Lisa character is a stand-in for Gregs girlfriend Amber (Alison Brie), who Tommy feels is stealing Greg away from him. Several of the supporting cast come to believe an alternate theory, however, where Lisa is a stand-in for the entire universe, which Tommy blames for rejecting his noble spirit.

Behind the camera, Seth Rogen plays Sandy, the director of photography who tries to keep the production together despite Tommys inexperience and incompetence. Other familiar faces such as Zac Efron, Sharon Stone and Bob Odenkirk provide fun cameos as we see the making of many infamous scenes from the film, including Tommys water bottle monologue and an awkward love scene that, while played for comic purposes, may give audiences more of James Franco than they bargained for.

The film is a showcase for Franco, whose performance is so bizarre that you would normally expect him to get criticism for overacting. But in this case, he seems pretty faithful to his real-life inspiration.

The Disaster Artists treatment of that inspiration which falls somewhere between outright mockery and sincere adoration is perhaps the films most unique accomplishment. Tommy is square in Francos comic crosshairs, but the film also sympathizes with him as it captures the melodramatic hope of making the big time in Hollywood, the frustration of having reality crush your dreams and the wisdom that comes from having to make the best of a rotten situation.

At some point youll inevitably wonder just how much of the truth has been exaggerated for this based on a true story. Thats probably why Franco finishes the film with several minutes of shot-by-shot comparisons of original scenes from The Room next to his re-creations. You dont have to have seen The Room in order to enjoy The Disaster Artist, but for fans of Wiseaus opus, Francos film is an early Christmas present.

The Disaster Artist is rated R for language throughout and some sexuality/nudity; running time: 103 minutes.
Sign up for our E-Newsletters