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On paper, Annie Baker's The Flick is 122 pages long. For a typical play this would mean a running time somewhere between two hours and fifteen minutes and two and a half hours at the most. On stage at Playwrights Horizons, the performance I attended of director Sam Gold's production of The Flick ran a bit over three hours and fifteen minutes.
The play is set in designer David Zinn's realistic auditorium, complete with rows of red chairs and holes in the upstage wall where the projector is set. The theatre audience sits where the screen would be. As described in Baker's script, the play opens in darkness, the only light coming from the projector hitting above the theatre audience's heads. We hear Bernard Herrmann's introductory film scoring for The Naked And The Dead, though all we see of the film is the bright white light flashing for, as specified by the playwright, two minutes.
After letting these characters simmer for a while, revealing bits of their backgrounds and developing an attraction between Avery and Rose, Baker introduces the news that the art house is being sold to a chain that plans to replace the projector and go digital. While Sam and Rose are concerned for their jobs, Avery is infuriated with the switch to modern, less-artistic technology.
Although there is enough in The Flick to keep an audience satisfied for a more standard two-hour length, Baker and Gold's commitment to their interpretation of realism - including repetitious scenes and long silences that do not speak volumes - alienates attention from the sweet, humorous story of the day-to-day lives of three troubled people. This love letter to the movies could afford to incorporate a bit of theatre's elevated reality.
Photos by Joan Marcus: Top: Matthew Maher; Bottom: Louisa Krause and Aaron Clifton Moten.
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