Monday, March 3, 2008

My Effortless Briliance
Editor’s Note: I’ve decided to begin posting my reviews of films screening at SXSW early, hope­fully helping anyone attending make some decisions about what to see. My Effortless Brilliance is screening on Sunday March 9 and Tuesday March 11 at 11:00am, and on Thursday March 13 at 1:30pm. All screen­ings are at the Alamo Ritz 1.

My Effortless Brilliance (2008, Director: Lynn Shelton): Well, although I haven’t seen it, I think it might be impossible to talk about this film without ref­er­en­cing Kelly Reichardt’s Old Joy (2006). Both films fea­ture female dir­ectors dir­ecting an all-male cast, fea­turing a musi­cian in a lead role, in stories about lost male friend­ship and set in the wil­der­ness of the Pacific Northwest. Except that in the case of My Effortless Brilliance, it’s played mostly (but not only) for laughs.

Sean Nelson is the lead singer of the band Harvey Danger, but he seems born for the screen. In the film he plays Eric Lambert Jones, a semi-successful nov­elist who is doing read­ings for his third novel. While in rural eastern Washington, he drives four hours out of his way to drop in on his old friend Dylan (Basil Harris). The film begins two years earlier, with Dylan essen­tially breaking up with Eric, telling him he’s always been a ter­rible friend. Eric’s attempt to somehow rekindle the friend­ship doesn’t go smoothly. He dis­covers that Dylan is working for a local news­paper and is con­tent living in his cabin in the woods. He also has a new best friend, the lac­onic Jim (Calvin Reeder) who seems happy to hunt and fish and read nothing more lit­erary than Bukowski. Over the weekend, the trio hang out and drink, with the overedu­cated city slicker Eric trying his best to fit into this set­ting. With his round face and wild curls, Sean Nelson plays Eric like the over­grown baby he is, self-absorbed and needy. He is a man who lives mostly in his head and who seems allergic to phys­ical labour. Dylan and his new friend Jim are men of action, who wear plaid work­shirts and seem to enjoy split­ting wood all day. Just as it looks like Eric has over­stayed his wel­come, the three get into a drunken con­ver­sa­tion that feels remark­ably like a real drunken con­ver­sa­tion. The end result is the sight of the group of them out­side in the middle of the night, hunting a cougar, and then the inev­it­able hangovers on the morning after.

What I liked about the film was its hon­esty. Men’s friend­ships can be pretty dif­fi­cult to por­tray. We don’t often have heart to heart con­ver­sa­tions and talk about our feel­ings, but we do express them in oblique ways, and My Effortless Brilliance felt extremely real to me. This is prob­ably due to the fact that Sean Nelson and Basil Harris are real-life friends, and that the script was a col­lab­or­ative effort between the actors and the dir­ector. That is, if there actu­ally was a script. The sense of impro­visa­tion is so strong and the film so gor­geously shot that you’ll feel like you’re tag­ging along on Eric’s weekend in the country.

Official site for the film

7/10(7/10)

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Rocket Science

by James McNally on March 3, 2008

in DVD

Rocket Science

Rocket Science (2007, Director: Jeffrey Blitz): This first fic­tional fea­ture from the dir­ector of Oscar-nominated doc Spellbound sounded prom­ising. Fifteen-year-old Hal Hefner (Reece Daniel Thompson) tries to over­come his painful stutter by joining the high school debate squad, spurred by the pres­ence of the lovely but fast-talking Ginny Ryerson (Anna Kendrick). I’m no stranger to the high school nerd makes good comedy, and con­sider myself a fan, so it’s a little dis­ap­pointing to have to give this film a so-so review. The problem for me was that I’ve seen this movie done better else­where. In fact, the plot is more than a little sim­ilar to Thumbsucker (2005), Mike Mills’ fea­ture debut about a teen­ager who tries to over­come another “han­dicap” (sucking his thumb) by, among other things, joining the high school debate squad. There’s even a phys­ical resemb­lance between that film’s star, Lou Taylor Pucci, and the sim­il­arly treble-monikered Reece Daniel Thompson. But Thumbsucker was based on a novel by Walter Kirn, and felt more ambi­tious, not to men­tion being funnier.

It’s not that Rocket Science isn’t like­able. There is some genuine humour and it’s hard not to root for Hal. But the stut­tering isn’t just Hal’s problem. The nar­rative itself seems to pro­ceed in fits and starts, and by the end, nothing has really happened. Hal has sup­posedly “found his voice” but he really hasn’t. We’re not really sure whether the debating thing is going to con­tinue, and we’ve never really seen him do his stuff in front of a crowd. The only hint that he’s actu­ally put any work into the research (and his attempts to woo Ginny) are a series of pretty standard mont­ages. I wanted to know what they were talking about. To make things worse, there’s a voi­ceover that bor­ders on unbear­able. It’s not clear whether this is the adult Hal reflecting on his youth, or some all-wise over­seer who knows it’s all going to work out. Either way, it was trite and annoying. And while Hal emerges as the most com­plete char­acter, no one else in the film is fleshed out in any way, with his par­ents being the most glaring absence. Unfortunately, many of the other char­ac­ters in the film are nothing more than quirky stereotypes.

Rocket Science is a film that is both familiar and unpre­dict­able, and while this ten­sion could have been a strength, it ended up frus­trating me instead. If I recall cor­rectly, the story is a little bit auto­bi­o­graph­ical, since dir­ector Jeffrey Blitz him­self suf­fers from a stutter. I wish that he had trusted more in his own exper­i­ence and maybe given us a film that didn’t try to play for laughs so much. If he had stripped away a few of the more gim­micky touches and given us a more per­sonal film, I think I would have enjoyed it more.

Buy Rocket Science from Amazon.ca

Buy Rocket Science from Amazon.com

6/10(6/10)

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