Patch Adams
No one is more evangelistic than the newly re born.
Beware the ex smoker. the ex drinker or the ex mental
patient because he or she is likely to be painfully over
enthusiastic, especially to the yet to be reformed.
Patch Adams is loosely based on a real character who,
feeling suicidal in his twenties, admitted himself into a
psychiatric institution. He soon emerged convinced that
loving kindness will heal most ills, or at least make the
disease more palatable.
The real Patch Adams entered and passed medical school
in the 1970's and opened an alternative medical facility
called the Geshundheit Institute which, if you can believe
the film, offered free treatment of a sort; the sort that
uses drugs pinched from the local hospital.
Enter Robin Williams as Patch Adams. If laughter is
the best medicine, you're a bit of a Robin Williams fan
and you enjoy a big dose of Hollywood fantasy, then this
film will please you greatly.
He begins the film bedraggled and of course much
older than the real Patch. He's depressed and might kill
himself so he puts himself into the hands of the doctors.
He's locked into a room with a fellow patient called
Rudy (Michael Jeter) who is crouched on the bed terrified
of imaginary squirrels. Patch blows them away with
imaginary machine guns and a doctor is born!
Cut to the medical school where an army styled dean
(Bob Gunton, who played the warden in The Shawshank
Redemption) is determined to turn his students into
doctors; creatures far superior to humans. The stage is
set.
This is classic Robin Williams territory. He plays
the well meaning, very funny, inordinately warm human
being who bucks authority and who appeals to the better
instincts of those insensitive individuals who are in
power. We've seen this before in Good Morning Vietnam,
Mrs. Doubtfire, When Dreams Might Come and Good Poets
Society; his kindly uncle persona.
Williams has made this territory his own.
Patch Adams works the magic well. It's laced with
terrific Robin Williams one liners which are often
absurdly funny and lots of gently humourous slapstick
clowning, largely to do with props such as enema bulbs as
false noses or bed pans as shoes.
There are a succession of set pieces; the most
unrealistic of which is the crashing by Patch with student
friend Truman (Daniel London) of a Meat Packers convention;
the most amusing of which is a wonderfully outlandish
welcome for a gynecological convention; the most annoying
of which is the wooing of a young medical student called
Carin (Monica Potter) by the very middle aged Patch.
A middle aged lover for Patch would have been a
pleasing variation on the old geyser gets young bird
theme which is so popular.
And then there's even a court scene (in a hospital!)
thrown in with an appropriate audience of cancer patients
and you can be sure that you've been asked to leap
through just about all of the appropriate hoops, but so
what! Robin Williams can make this sort of stuff work
pretty well.
Patch Adams is Robin Williams at his middle aged
best. It's not as anarchic as Mork And Mindy, as
energetic as Good Morning Vietnam, as sad as Dead
Poets' Society, as funny as Mrs. Doubtfire or as wishful
as When Dreams Might Come. But Patch Adams is pretty
funny and reasonably intelligent.
3 And A Half Patched Together Flys
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