AS GOOD AS IT GETS
Melvin Udall is not someone that if you met, you would not want to be around. You certainly would not like him. However, one of the elements in As Good as It Gets is that despite all logic, we end up liking, even loving Melvin no matter how awful he is to others. As Good as It Gets is a wonderful comedy, blending humor and heart where you find yourself laughing even at things that you would cringe at.
Melvin Udall (Jack Nicholson) writes successful romance novels, but he is in many ways a loathsome person. He insults people openly, sometimes shockingly. While he does have obsessive-compulsive disorder, Melvin is also extremely difficult to deal with in his routines. Among those is having breakfast at not just the exact same restaurant but at the exact same table. If anyone else dares to sit at his table, he will not shrink from going beyond mere insults to being downright bigoted in order to get them out. Only Brooklyn waitress Carol Connelly (Helen Hunt) can work with him.
She also is the only person who can put Melvin in his place. When he dares suggest that her chronically ill son Spencer (Jesse James) will die like everyone else, she makes clear that if Melvin ever brings up Spence again, she will not serve him. For once, Melvin backs down, mostly due to how that would upset his routine though perhaps a small part of him feels shame about targeting a child.
He won't back down when it comes to insulting his openly gay neighbor, painter Simon Bishop (Greg Kinnear) and his little dog too. Simon struggles to confront Melvin, something Simon's art dealer and friend Frank Sachs (Cuba Gooding, Jr.) does not have a problem with. Simon's newest model, hustler Vincent (Skeet Ulrich), poses for two weeks. However, Vincent is party to his fellow hustlers robbing Simon, almost killing the painter. Melvin, no fan of Simon, at least has enough sense to contact the police.
Now, Melvin owes Frank a favor for not beating him up before. That favor? Look after Verdell, Simon's beloved dog whom Melvin cannot stand. Despite himself, Melvin soon starts bonding with Verdell. He also finds that, despite his misanthropic nature, he soon starts getting involved in the lives of both Simon and Carol. When he finds that Carol cannot come serve him because of Spencer's illness, Melvin pays for a specialist to treat him. He goes so far as to venture from Manhattan to Brooklyn to see if Carol can come back to work.
Melvin also agrees, very reluctantly, to go with Simon to Baltimore to see if Simon's estranged parents can help him financially. Terrified that Simon will attempt to seduce him, Melvin pushes Carol to go with them. On their way to and from Baltimore, friendships and romances build, fall and return.
As Good as It Gets is a master class in writing thanks to Mark Andrus and director James L. Brooks' screenplay. The story flows smoothly, where Melvin's evolution from almost anti-human to somewhat functional but still crass person is natural even though he still says awful things. We know that Melvin is a very terrible person at the beginning, when he dumps Verdell down the garbage chute rather than see the dog urinate on the floor. Add to that how, when Simon asks about Verdell, Melvin replies that he thought that Simon was referring to "that colored man that I've been seeing in the halls".
As the film goes on, Melvin continues saying the most awful and bigoted things. However, the end result is that we laugh at him, not with him. Melvin's overall uncomfortableness, his thorough thoughtlessness is all played for laughs. We do see, however, that a wonderful element of As Good as It Gets is that we see that for all his awfulness, Melvin has another side to him.
We see it when he is writing his newest romance novel, the words of love pouring out. We see it whenever someone, be it Carol or Frank, stands up to him. As the film goes on, the delight that he has with Verdell makes Melvin almost cuddly. How can we hate someone who sings Always Look on the Bright Side of Life to a dog? He still is in many respects a horrible person; by the time he introduces Carol and Simon to each other as "Carol the waitress, meet Simon the fag", we see that Melvin is less monstrous and more clueless about people.
There is also a sense of schadenfreude when Melvin has to endure a serious of disasters: he loses Verdell to Simon, is refused to be seen at the psychiatrist's office for his insistence on not making an appointment and finds a new waitress at his table. When he finally is ordered out of the restaurant over his boorish behavior, Melvin's body language shows a man thoroughly dejected, the applause from the other restaurant patrons giving this scene a greater comedic punch.
The film is filled with great quips and insults. I think the best-known one is when he is asked how he can write women so well. "I think of a man, and I take away reason and accountability", he replies to a female fan at his publisher's office.
As Good as It Gets also has the great blessing of Jack Nicholson in the lead role. Nicholson makes Melvin into a funny character both despite and because of his behavior and bigotry. I think it is because there is a slight impishness in Nicholson's performance, as if we saw that for all his outward bluster and boorish behavior Melvin has something of a heart. He shows the vulnerable man behind the eccentric behavior. Melvin is a misanthrope, but he also is able to see joy in how children are fond of Verdell. You end up being charmed by Melvin, some of the time, and that is due to Nicholson's performance.
Nicholson has a strong group of actors working with him. In a curious turn, I think Helen Hunt is the weaker of the three main characters (Melvin, Carol and Simon). It is not that Hunt, in her Best Actress Oscar-winning performance, is bad. She has a wonderful scene where she struggles to write a lengthy thank-you note to Melvin, which is quite moving. The problem with Hunt's performance is that she struggles quite audibly with her Brooklyn accent. It is a case of trying too hard to sound like someone born and bred in the borough when that accent not just comes and goes but goes from heavy to nonexistent. I think it might have been better if Hunt had not adopted or attempted the Brooklyn accent, which could have been easily explained away as Carol being a transplant.
Greg Kinnear, who was best known at the time as the host of the comic clip show Talk Soup, had made a few films before As Good as It Gets, but here he did one of his best performances, rightfully earning a Best Supporting Actor nomination. Fey without being cartoonish, Kinnear made Simon into a lost man struggling not so much with his sexuality but with his own sense of worth separate from that. Kinnear has a standout scene where he is on the telephone to his mother. The shift from someone looking for help to someone who sees that he is not helpless is there in his performance. Kinner also has a nice bit where he imitates Nicholson, showing Kinnear a good mimic and Simon capable of having a spine.
If I have a few caveats about As Good as It Gets, separate from Hunt's dodgy accent, are with some plot points. I struggle with the idea that anyone would have hired a street hustler to be Simon's model versus looking for a professional. We never saw how Melvin came to find that Simon had been robbed and attacked. I had a major issue at the scene where Simon's injuries and reaction to them were played for laughs.
Still, overall, As Good as It Gets holds up very well. Yes, Melvin says awful things that are insulting at best, downright racist and homophobic at worst. However, that is part of the joke: that Melvin, as abrasive as he is, is unaware that he looks foolish. It is hard not to laugh throughout As Good as It Gets, a crowning achievement for everyone involved.