examining his finances, reviewing his self
by
Douglas Messerli
Spencer
Beglarian and Brian To (screenplay), Brian To (director) Audit / 2001 [28
minutes]
Even
before they enter the dark and drab halls of the Federal building Julie Leer
(Judy Greer) and Jack Kroll (Michael G. Kelley) are already arguing. Both are
rather terrified about the audit they are about to undergo, but have been told
that the authorities are more lenient when the couple both show up and explain
their expenses, even though this couple evidently have a tax lawyer.
Jack is a beginning actor whose major role
of the year was as a dog, which he played part of the time in the nude.
Yet she seems friendly to Julie, and merrily
sends them off to Richard Valentine (played by the noted transgender actor Alexis
Arquette, here playing a male), the auditor.
For
the first moments, any questions posed by Valentine are basically interrupted
by Julie as she demands, first to change seats with her husband, and secondly
that Richard put away the clutter of pens and scissors spilled across his desk.
As she begins to clean them up, he rebels and quickly spills them out upon his
desk again, not an auspicious beginning for the couple.
Turning his attention to Julie, he cannot explain her deduction of 6,000
for makeup and other expenses as an actor given that she was unable to attain
any roles and made no money in that “career.” In challenging her, is clearly
ready to categorize her career as a hobby.
Seemingly stressed by his questions, Julie
decides to take a bathroom break, actually in attempt to smoke in a Federal
building where no smoking is permitted. In the bathroom she encounters the
secretary who immediately comes on to Julie, kissing her and attempting to
seduce her, an aggressive lesbian determined to make love to the thin beauty
that Julie represents.
In the bathroom the secretary reveals to Julie her husband’s former relationship with the auditor, and how he supported him for years. At first, Julie refuses to believe it, but upon returning to the office spots the photograph of the two and grows increasingly furious with both of the men, betraying Jack concerning some of his false deductions and putting down the auditor by explaining that, despite his obvious dismissal of her seconding job as a Feng Shui consultant, that she actually brought in $13,000, evidently higher than the amount they had declared. She leaves the two ex-lovers to themselves, furiously leaving the building.
When Jack finally admits he misses Richard,
the auditor determines to simply close the case, returning their files without
any further changes, Jack giving him a quick kiss on the lips in appreciation
for the decision, told by Richard hurry off to his wife to see if he can still
salvage the marriage.
We quickly perceive, however, that Julie
had long known of his previous relationship and they had planned all along to
use it to manipulate the situation so that all of their false deductions would
be forgiven. Indeed, they determine to now celebrate at the Ivy or Morton’s,
two of Los Angeles’s expensive hot spots for people in the movie business. Jack
chuckles over his success, yet the laughter is clearly somewhat artificial, and
when he repeats the celebratory chortle, we perceive it is not so much a real laugh
as much as it is a kind of thwarted cry for something that he has lost, a cynical
guffaw released in recognition of all that he has been forced to give up simply
to find his meager success. His marriage to this empty-headed woman, we perceive,
is a sad trade-off for the sake of his career.
As Julie celebrates their lies, she expresses
her hope that he didn’t have to actually kiss the auditor to get what he
wanted, explaining that the lesbian secretary had been all over her. But we
sense, now in retrospect, that perhaps Jack’s kiss of Richard was not all in jest,
that he does indeed miss aspects of their truly loving relationship, a
sexuality he is no longer able to express. While he may have been able to succeed
in lying about his financial situation, the inner audit he has just undergone
is not been so easily resolved.
It was interesting watching this film in
2025 with the fascinating Sally Kirkland, the former avant- garde actor who was
once part of Andy Warhol’s factory who died that year at the age of 84 after
having suffered dementia; witnessing a somewhat late work in Arquette’s career
after she transitioned from a man into women, but had begun shifting gender
roles before dying of AIDS complications in 2016.
Los
Angeles, January 8, 2026
Reprinted
from My Queer Cinema blog (January 2026).






Vu sur YouTube. Très intéressant.
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