Roger Ebert noted in his review, “Movie-industry
gossip has it that Kathleen Turner didn’t particularly want to make this
sequel, and that even Michael Douglas, who produces as well as stars, thought
it might be best to quit while he was ahead. But the original contract
specified a sequel, and it’s to everybody’s credit that “The Jewel of the Nile”
is an ambitious and elaborate attempt to repeat the success of the first movie;
it’s not just a ripoff.”
In hindsight, it lacks some of the enjoyment of the last
film, especially the development of the romance between Douglas and Turner.
Here, as the movie starts, they’re old friends, relaxing in Cannes and
reminiscing about the good times they had in South America. Maybe feeling that
there is nowhere to go with this mainly stable relationship, the movie throws
them almost immediately into Middle East scheming.
A ridiculously wealthy Arab, played by Spiros Focas,
invites Turner to travel with him to his homeland, for reasons as vague as they
are fascinating. Ebert said, “Douglas temporarily drops out; after a
manufactured spat, he decides he would rather sail his boat through the
Mediterranean.” Turner is quickly involved in danger as the Arab reveals plans
to seize the role of a legendary holy man, and Douglas becomes a friend of the
great spiritual leader, who is known as the Jewel of the Nile. (Ebert noted, “Danny
DeVito is some what lost in all of this, and left for long stretches of the
film to wander through the desert and suffer meaningless tortures in lieu of a
clearly defined role.”)
Ebert continued, ““The Jewel of the Nile” expends
amazing resources on some of its scenes, including a gigantic spiritual meeting
in the desert that is staged as a cross between a rock concert and the
Nuremberg Rally.” What makes the Middle Eastern material work, however, is the
performance by Eisenberg, who is a real comic discovery. He has some of the
same sarcastic innocence we saw in Harold Ramis’ character in “Ghostbusters” –
he’s very wise and very innocent. Ebert pointed out, “Some of his best moments
involve his bewildering cross-cultural dialogue: He speaks in vast metaphysical
concepts, which are unexpectedly interrupted with 1985 slang and pop sociology.”
Meanwhile, Douglas and Turner have fun with two of the
largest roles in recent memory. They fight, they make up, they joke at the look
of disaster. Ebert noted, “Just as Woody Allen and Diane Keaton always seem to
be on the same wavelength in their comic dialogues, so do Douglas and Turner,
in their own way, make an ideally matched comedy team.” It is evident that they
like each other and are having fun during the constant ridiculous situations in
the movie, and their chemistry is sometimes more entertaining than the devices
of the plot.
Ebert admitted, “My favorite moment between them comes
as they hang by their hands over a rat pit, while acid gnaws away at the ropes
that suspend them above certain doom. Sure, this scene owes something to
“Raiders of the Lost Ark.” But what’s new about it this time is the dialogue –
the way they break down and confess that they love each other, and make
marriage plans as death inexorably approaches. And then, when DeVito appears
and might possibly save them, there is some business with a ladder that is
followed by dialogue so perfectly timed that I laughed not so much in amusement
as in delight at how well the mechanisms of the scene fell together.”
For all of its enjoyment, “The Jewel of the Nile” is a
minor and unimportant entertainment. How could it be otherwise? Even though it
is not the same of “Romancing the Stone.” That’s not a surprise. For what it
is, however, it’s fun. Ebert ended his review by saying, “And for what it’s
worth, Douglas and Turner could keep on working in this tradition forever,
giving us a 1980s version of the Bing Crosby and Bob Hope “Road” pictures. I
guess they don’t want to, though, and perhaps that’s just as well. What I hope
is that a casting director sees Avner Eisenberg for what he is: the most
intriguing comedy discovery in a long time.”
Yes, this is not as good as the first movie, seeing
how it might be a disappointment when revealed that “The Jewel of the Nile” is
a person and not an actual jewel, but I still thought it was good. This is
still at a time when Zemeckis was at his prime and I think everyone should
check this one out. I don’t think everyone will like it as much as the first
movie, but that is to be expected with certain sequels. You will still have fun
when watching it, I can say that much.
Next week, I will look at another classic film as we
continue “Michael Douglas Month.”
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