While everyone remembers Jerry Lewisโ€™s hilarious youth with comedy partner Dean Martin, less is said about his flings with drama. His turn as a burned-out late-night talk show host in Martin Scorseseโ€™s The King of Comedy was a revelation: Lewisโ€™s every glance and movement revealed a lifetime of Hollywood bullshit and demonstrated the depth of his talent. Almost 35 years after that role, Lewis is back with a similar one in Max Rose.

As the titular Max, Lewis plays a one-hit wonder jazz pianist at the end of his lifeโ€”though his wife and lifetime love died first. While going through her things, Max finds evidence of a possible secret lover, which puts him in a tailspin of remorse and jealousy, leading him to discover everything he can about this mysterious stranger.

Make no mistake: Lewis acts the shit out of this role. His watery eyes are filled with remorse, defeat, and rage over the passage of time. And the rest of the castโ€”Kevin Pollak, Kerry Bishรฉ, Dean Stockwell, Mort Sahl, and moreโ€”give naturalistic, nuanced performances as well.

And yet? Thereโ€™s no getting around a script thatโ€™s a bunch of manipulative claptrap. From the morose soundtrackโ€”composed in the most obvious, saddest key of D minorโ€”to languishing shots of Lewis slowly walking down hallways (leading the viewer to expect a broken hip at any moment), to the utterly predictable script that attempts to drive tears from your eyes with a whip and a chair, all thatโ€™s left to enjoy are the performances. Even then, Max Rose canโ€™t inspire a recommendation. recommended