![]() The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.Inherent Vice is a novel by American author Thomas Pynchon, originally published in August 2009. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at for further information. Questions are more his game, and that's as true here as it was in his far more serious pictures "The Master" and "There Will Be Blood." He is a terrific stylist, though, and the scattershot pleasures he's peddling in "Inherent Vice" may well satisfy those who like style more than substance, or maybe who like their style with substances. Anderson isn't generally a guy you go to if you're looking for answers. Does their being addled add up? Well, Director P.T. MONDELLO: That's Reese Witherspoon he is misunderstanding, and he's equally perplexed by Benicio Del Toro, Owen Wilson, Martin Short and, especially, Josh Brolin as Detective Bigfoot, each of whom is addled by drugs or by circumstances. WITHERSPOON: (As Deputy Kimball) You would? REESE WITHERSPOON: (As Deputy Kimball) Would you be willing to let me depone you? But Thomas Pynchon's novel soaked the story enough in recreational drugs to give the noir a psychedelic tinge, and the movie has a manic quality with Joaquin Phoenix's Doc snorting or smoking every substance that comes his way while trying to get lucky with the attractive ex-girlfriends and erotic dancers he's interrogating and the attractive law enforcement agent who's interrogating him. ![]() MONDELLO: We are as weird as all this becomes, still in film noir territory. ![]() JOSH BROLIN: (As Bigfoot) (Foreign language spoken). MONDELLO: He gets knocked out cold and wakes up next to the corpse of Wolfmann's bodyguard which would be less alarming if there weren't a whole other scheme afoot involving a jazz band, anti-communist subversives, a separately missing hubby, a purple-suited dentist, a teen runaway, a drug cartel called the Golden Fang and a detective named Bigfoot who likes to order Swedish pancakes in a Japanese restaurant. UNIDENTIFIED ACTRESS: He's technically Jewish, but wants to be a Nazi. PHOENIX: (As Doc): So where would I find him? So does Wolfmann, and when Doc starts poking around. As soon as Shasta tells Doc this, she disappears. Turns out Shasta's got a billionaire boyfriend named Wolfmann whose wife is plotting with her boyfriend to consign him to a loony bin. WATERSTON: (As Shasta) Just spent an hour on surface streets trying make it look good. PHOENIX: (As Doc) Somebody keeping a close eye? WATERSTON: (As Shasta) Almost went over there, then I thought better for everyone if this looks like a secret rendezvous. PHOENIX: (As Doc) You know, I have an office now. WATERSTON: (As Shasta) I need your help, Doc. MONDELLO: And he's psyched until it turns out this isn't just a social call. KATHERINE WATERSTON: (As Shasta) Thinks he's hallucinating. Doc, a long-haired private eye, is lying stoned on his couch at midday when he sees what seems to be a vision - his ex looking radiant and almost unrecognizable. ![]() The place - a beach town in Southern California with the laid-back feel of a hippie haven. Filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson is known for dense, complicated movies like "There Will Be Blood." Novelist Thomas Pynchon writes dense, complicated books like "Gravity's Rainbow." So what happens when Hollywood puts these two together for a drug-fueled caper comedy called "Inherent Vice?" Critic Bob Mondello says, no surprise, it's dense and complicated.īOB MONDELLO, BYLINE: The year is 1970. ![]()
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