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'Domino' is Only Sort of Accurate.
By Cathy Schultz
"Based on a true story. Sort of."
Those words open the new movie, Domino, a wild ride of a
film that chronicles the life of Domino Harvey, a child of Hollywood
privilege who became a bounty hunter in 1990s Los Angeles.
Is there truth to this tale? Not much. That is, it's not 'true'
in the manner that most biopics strive for. Recent films on Ray
Charles, Howard Hughes, and Alexander the Great (among others) offer
us linear, predictable, fairly accurate portrayals of those lives.
Mostly true, with just a bit of fudging for dramatic license.
But Domino is a skewed, non-linear memoir, which readily
abandons historical reality to engage in fantastic flights of fantasy.
Even its look contributes to its surreal take on Domino's life.
The feverish editing, MTV-style cinematography, and saturated colors
create the impression that the whole production crew was operating
under the influence while making this film. What results is not
exactly a biopic, but more like a biopic on an acid trip.
Yet ironically, that approach may offer more "truth"
about Domino's life than a straight biopic might. For the real Domino
Harvey struggled for years with a drug addiction, a fact almost
entirely glossed over in this film.
Domino, the film, is fast, funny, and weirdly mesmerizing,
as well as violent, disjointed, and often incoherent.
A lot like the actual Domino Harvey.
Q. Who was Domino Harvey?
A. The movie follows the key bullet points (no pun intended) of
Domino's biography. She was the daughter of Vogue model Pauline
Stone (whose name is changed here) and Hollywood matinee idol Laurence
Harvey. There's a nicely subtle reference to her father when, during
a bust at a squalid house, a TV in the background is showing Harvey's
scenes in The Manchurian Candidate.
Domino worked briefly as a model, before answering an advertisement
to become a bounty hunter at a bail bonds agency. The adrenalin
rush of the job suited her. The next fifteen years of her life (she
died at 35 this past June of a drug overdose) involved guns, knives,
and arresting people. And just as in the movie, she predominately
worked with two male partners named Ed and Choco.
Q. Was she English? Or was her accent simply because Keira Knightley
was cast to play her?
A. The accent was real. Harvey grew up in London, and didn't move
to California until she was 19.
Q. Was there a reality show made about Domino's bounty hunting
exploits?
A. The apparent absurdity of this notion should rule out the possibility
of it being true. A reality TV show about bounty hunters? Are you
kidding?
Well, maybe not so absurd after all. Domino Harvey didn't actually
get her own reality show, but a bounty hunter named Duane "Dog"
Chapman has one. Dog airs on the A&E network, of all
places.
Q. So, the film's whole convoluted plot involving the former
stars of Beverly Hills 90210 hosting the "Bounty Squad"
was an invention?
A. Completely. Ian Ziering and Brian Austin Green were very funny
here playing 'themselves,' and were amazingly good-natured about
mocking their own images.
But in fact, the whole "Bounty Squad" reality show subplot,
which made up at least half of the movie, was when the film took
a hard left turn into absurdity. There was nothing real in the film's
escapades involving celebrity hostages, armored truck robberies,
thieves dressed as the First Ladies, spectacular RV crashes in the
Nevada desert, and the destruction of Las Vegas's Stratosphere Hotel.
Often funny, but not real.
And the severed arm with the tattoo of a safe combination on it?
Nope. They made that one up, too.
Q. So, Domino's bounty hunting exploits probably weren't as
exciting as shown in the film?
A. Probably not. For one thing, she never did a lap dance to defuse
a gang standoff, as shown here. And a fair number of the fugitives
she helped arrest were unarmed, two-bit petty criminals, not gang
members armed with AK-47s.
Unlike the nonstop action seen here, being a bounty hunter is not
only about busting down doors while screaming obscenities and wielding
shotguns.
But to find out what else it is all about, I might have to start
watching A&E's reality show, Dog.Surely that should provide
me with an accurate portrayal of a real-life bounty hunter.
Well, sort of.
By Cathy Schultz, Ph.D. 10/18/05
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