I saw the poster for the Harold Ramis comedy "Multiplicity" so many times in 1996, but it was one of those movies that I just never crossed paths with. It was a box office bomb, and never entered the rotation of syndicated movies that would play constantly on our local television channels on the weekends. We all knew who Michael Keaton was, but he wasn't enough of a draw in the mid-90s to sway my family to rent one of his movies instead of the latest Robin Williams or Jim Carrey vehicle. Still, "Multiplicity" seemed to be a movie that I would enjoy. It had a goofy sci-fi premise. It had Andie MacDowell, who I generally like, as the female lead. So, this was definitely on that endless running list of movies that I meant to check out eventually, someday.
Well, someday turned out to be yesterday. "Multiplicity" is currently available on Tubi, so I went ahead and took the plunge. The movie is not very good, but it's fascinating to look at as an artifact of the '90s, so I gotta write about it. Spoilers ahead.
There is very little that surprised me about "Multiplicity." It fits very well in that vein of 90s comedy based on material taken from "National Lampoon," mining the base instincts and preoccupations of the Boomer male for comedy. Doug Kinney is a sympathetic protagonist, at least at first. He's an overworked construction foreman who never has enough hours in the day for his job, his family, and himself. Through the magic of Harris Yulin in a lab coat, Doug gets his very own clone to help out - meaning a Xerox copy of himself with the same memories up to the point of cloning. Then another clone. Then another clone. These clones are initially referred to by number - Two, Three, and Four - before getting their own names. Two spends all his time working construction and comes across as very masculine and assertive. Three does most of the domestic wrangling, has a lot of feminine behaviors, and is very gay coded. Four, who was cloned from one of the other clones, and thus not as "sharp," is a walking dumbbell who is there for comic relief. It's obvious why Michael Keaton signed on, because he gets to play four funny versions of the same guy. Keaton does a decent job, but the writing really doesn't do him any favors.
Though one of the four credited writers is a woman, "Multiplicity" is a product of the male id. Doug has let his life get so overbooked that he needs two other versions of himself working full time to get a break. His wife Laura is a flimsily constructed creature who creates a lot of Doug's problems by going back to work, but this isn't a "Mr. Mom" scenario where the couple really feel like partners sharing their struggles. All the extra work falls on Doug's shoulders and Laura is so preoccupied that she doesn't ever realize that there are three additional Dougs living out of the family shed to help pick up the slack. Doug insists that the clones should never be intimate with her, as his unbreakable "Rule One," but she ends up sleeping with all three of them inadvertently. To sidestep any difficult moral questions and emotional fallout, Laura just never finds out the truth. She takes what she thinks are Doug's wild personality shifts and forgetfulness to be symptoms of a failing relationship, and temporarily leaves with the kids. Doug, who by this time has been fired from his demanding job, and has learned that too much free time is bad, is able to win her back by finally fulfilling his promise to remodel the house. He proves his devotion through manual labor and the promise of a job change. Then, even though there's no sign that Doug's life will get any less busy, he sends the clones off to Florida together to start lives of their own.
The obvious joke here is that Doug can't handle a situation that many working parents have been handling forever, even with all the extra hands. However, that's not really fair, as Doug is never shown to be anything but a loving and well-meaning father, who tries to do the right thing with the wrong methods. The bigger issue is that Doug being overworked is really just scaffolding for all the clone humor, and the movie never really takes his troubles all that seriously. The scripting also shows a lack of imagination, barely exploring the consequences of having the clones around. Nobody notices the grocery bill going up or the other extra expenses. Laura never catches on about the clones, but neither do the kids or anybody else. The cloning lab is so inconsequential that the clones may as well have been made by magic. Even the sexual hijinks are pretty tame. The moral implications are the only interesting part, which are skipped over entirely.
Instead, a lot of "Multiplicity" hinges on the audience being impressed by the gimmick of multiple Michael Keatons onscreen at the same time. The effects are very good - good enough that I forgot about them a lot of the time - except that the camera kept drawing attention to the double/triple/quadruple act in distracting ways. The characterization of the clones also gets overly cartoonish in a hurry. Two was initially interesting in that he lets Doug see what his life would have looked like if he'd stayed single and unattached, but this doesn't really go anywhere. When all three clones are interacting, they come off as three completely different personalities - which is great for the comedy, but it all feels arbitrary and convenient, with no attempt to explain why each clone has such different traits. Three in particular just comes across as bizarre, especially since the implication is that doing housework makes you more feminine.
Am I overthinking a silly comedy? Sure, but "Multiplicity" came out a few years after "Mrs. Doubtfire" and "The Nutty Professor" already covered much of the same material much more thoughtfully and successfully. I can't think of anything that "Multiplicity" did that a dozen other movies of the same era did better. Keaton's performances just end up reminding me of when he played similar characters in prior films. Apparently there was quite a bit of improv in the "Multiplicity," and Keaton only had himself for a scene partner a lot of the time, which didn't help.
I'm glad that I finally watched this, but I don't think I missed much by not having "Multiplicity" in my regular movie rotation growing up. Keaton's made plenty of movies I like better.
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