The Secret Life of
Walter Mitty is a movie that has flown under the radar thus far in its
release, and probably will continue to do so. That’s a real shame, because in
this madcap season of Oscar contenders and “emotional” movies, Ben Stiller’s
latest really belongs at the top.
Walter Mitty is
something special, and there are many reasons for that – but it may not seem
like much of anything at first glance. After all, it’s just the story of a guy
who’s worked at LIFE Magazine for sixteen years in the “negative processing”
department. On the eve of LIFE’s last print issue, Walter receives a set of
negatives from one of the best freelance photographers around, with explicit
instructions that Negative #25 is destined for the cover. Trouble is, Negative
#25 isn’t in the package, and if Walter doesn’t find it, he’ll lose his job. This setup would have us believe that the
film is going to be yet another story of the Everyman rising to the top,
discovering hidden potential, getting the girl, and all that. But if we did
believe that…we’d be wrong. And therein lies the real beauty of this story.
Walter Mitty himself is the shining heart of this whole
endeavor. He is, in many ways, the “Everyman” we expect, at least on the
surface. Mild-mannered, quiet, not quick with a comeback. He’s simply ordinary,
at least on the outside. But on the inside…on the inside, Walter is a man who
may have grown up, but never left his childhood imagination behind. He tends to
do what those close to him call “zoning out” more often than most people
consider to be socially acceptable. As viewers, we’re taken along for the ride
on Walter’s “zone-outs”, and are thereby shown the value of them.
On the inside, Walter imagines himself the hero – saving a
puppy from a burning building, making that snappy comeback to his nasty new
boss, getting the girl. In reality, though, he’s doing things like missing his
train to work and chatting with Patton Oswalt’s endearing eHarmony rep. What’s so crucial (and unique) about these
scenes is the manner in which they are presented. These are not flights of
fancy, played for laughs. They don’t distance us from Walter. Instead, they
teach us about his strength, make us identify with and understand him. Walter
is no caricature. He’s never larger than life, and never reduced to less than
what he really is. He’s painfully true. That simple fact earns this film more
respect and love in my book than any in recent memory.
See, we live in an age when it is “cool” to see quirky
characters. It’s supposed to be funny and neat when someone like Walter makes a
lame comeback or struggles socially or something, because we’re being
conditioned to believe that going through situations like that in everyday life
just means we’d make a cool character in a YA book someday. Problem is, for
most of us who are like Walter, that’s just not true. Perhaps the greatest
value of Walter Mitty is in its
ability to recognize that fact and honor it. The struggles Walter goes through,
those daily moments that just don’t turn out the way they would in movies, are
real, and the film never pretends otherwise. Nor does it make Walter into an
escapist loser who only ever accomplishes something in his own mind.
The film honors and values the reality of its main character,
and all of us like him, through and through. Many movies with characters like
Walter surreptitiously teach us to value those characters only inasmuch as they
have an ability to change. We’re taught that the Everyman/Everywoman only has
true value, and is only really a hero(ine), once they have completed the Hero’s
Journey. Having conquered their formerly meek selves and become for all intents
and purposes someone else – only then
do they really matter. We’re taught that we must change, must be completely
extraordinary, and that being as such means leaving ourselves behind. The
beauty of Walter Mitty lies in its
ability to remind us of the strength and intrinsic value we all have to begin
with. We’re reminded that sometimes, the most ordinary people are in and of
themselves extraordinary.
The journey Walter takes is one you should discover for
yourself. Seeing it summed up here would truly only lessen its impact. Suffice
it to say, the story of The Secret Life
of Walter Mitty is one that will take your inner cynical old man with a
shotgun (you know, the one who grouses at kids about his lawn?) and turn him
into a sentimental teenager filled with hope again. That alone is worth the
eight bucks.
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