THE LEGEND OF BAGGER VANCE
You know this is a legend because it’s set in the Deep South at a time when
thousands of lynchings took place and there’s nary a mention of racism. Instead,
we have Will Smith at his sardonic best playing a mystical lawn jockey — think of
The Green Mile without the mile — named Bagger Vance. (It’s a play on Bhagavad
Gita, the epic Hindu religious poem, which is the source of the Steven Pressfield novel
on which the movie is based, though director Robert Redford doesn’t push the literary heavy
lifting.) He arrives in Savannah at the height of the Depression not to ease the plight of the
starving unemployed but to help local golden boy Rannulph Junuh (“Arjuna” from the poem, if you’re
still taking notes), who’s played with a post–Rain Man accent by Matt Damon, win a golf match
against greats Bobby Jones (Joel Gretsch) and Walter Hagen (Bruce McGill) by serving as Rannulph’s caddy.
Dismayed by the horrors of World War I (which look, in flashback, like a walk in the park next to
Saving Private Ryan), Rannulph has “lost his swing.” He loses still more when he falls flat
in the clinch with the lovely Adele (Charlize Theron, showing glimpses of classic beauty, irrelevantly),
his old flame and the local heiress whose estate depends on the success of the links exhibition. Narrated
tiresomely by Jack Lemmon in the longest death scene in movie history, this overripe return to an era of
entitlement and mock aristocracy has as its moral “Your swing is out there waiting for you,” or “Different
strokes for different folks.” As for me, I prefer the legend of Tiger Woods. At Clarks Pond, Falmouth,
Auburn, Biddeford, Brunswick, Chunky’s-Sanford, Lewiston, Saco, Wells, Windham, Barrington, and Salisbury.
— Peter Keough
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