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- <text id=94TT1241>
- <title>
- Sep. 12, 1994: Cinema:The Little Movies That Could
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 12, 1994 Revenge of the Killer Microbes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/CINEMA, Page 86
- The Little Movies That Could
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Some low-budget independent films will give you more for your
- money than True Lies does
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <p> The Hollywood line is that this has been a summer of adult movies.
- But Forrest Gump, Wolf and Clear and Present Danger are not
- primarily for adults--that is, for grownups in search of films
- a bit more demanding than those in the standard coming-of-age,
- horror and thriller genres. Somebody has to wonder: Can there
- be other kinds of pictures? And if they exist, can they connect
- with a sufficient number of appreciative viewers?
- </p>
- <p> The answers, right now, are yes and yes. American independent
- films--pictures made on low budgets and released by smaller
- distributors--are shouldering their way into the Top 20 chart
- of weekly box-office winners. How low is low-budget? Kevin Smith's
- CLERKS, a wonderful day-in-the-life comedy set in a New Jersey
- convenience store, arrives next month. The total budget was
- $27,575. If Smith were given, say, the $100 million that True
- Lies is reputed to have cost, he could make 3,626 movies.
- </p>
- <p> But forget the money. Almost by definition, independent films
- are acts of love, not commerce. They are informed by the moviemaker's
- passion to put a vision on screen, and the process usually takes
- torturous years. That may be one reason so many of these films
- seem on the sour side. When getting a picture made means hocking
- your car, borrowing on your inheritance and panhandling your
- friends, the art that results can look pretty desperate. All
- the new films discussed below, even the comedies, play like
- cries from the heart--want ads from the abused and the absurd.
- </p>
- <p> White male, early 20s, just wants to get through the day.
- </p>
- <p> Dante (Brian O'Halloran) has the night shift at the Quick Stop
- convenience store in Leonardo, New Jersey. Bright, dour and
- put-upon, he wastes or redeems his time by fretting about life--about everything but his place in it, which he accepts with
- a readiness that annoys his friend Randal (Jeff Anderson). Clerks
- is a nothing-much-happens-and-ain't-that-the-big-truth? movie
- that gets considerable mileage from a couple of white guys,
- and their friends and customers, sitting around talking.
- </p>
- <p> The film looks no more expensive than it was; some of the acting
- (by local nonprofessionals) is spectacularly amateurish; the
- story is a series of anecdotes about hockey, shopping and loving
- the one you're with. But it's worth loitering in this shop.
- You never know what headline will show up on the cover of a
- tabloid (SPACE ALIEN REVEALED AS HEAD OF TIME WARNER--REPORT
- STOCK INCREASE).
- </p>
- <p> Yes, the film has its share of scabrous banter--recombinant
- four-letter words galore--but the conceit of Clerks is that
- foul-mouthed Jersey louts have elaborate vocabularies and pensive
- personalities. When Randal isn't shocking the frail with a list
- of porn-movie titles, he is offering such bartender wisdom to
- Dante as this: "That seems to be the leitmotiv of your life,
- ever backing down." Insults cascade into insights; obscenity
- snowballs into philosophy. Keeping the mind alert and the tongue
- sharp--for the eloquent jerks in Clerks, that's more than
- a defense mechanism. It's a vocation.
- </p>
- <p> White male, late teens, desires to be left alone, preferably
- in the bathroom.
- </p>
- <p> Raymond (Jeremy Davies) is the ideal student, the ideal son.
- So when his bullying, philandering dad tells the boy to give
- up a prestigious summer job to care for his mother (Alberta
- Watson), he does so. Mom, who has broken her leg, is a dish,
- and David O. Russell's SPANKING THE MONKEY soon reveals itself
- as The Graduate with one more taboo dropped. Instead of being
- seduced by his girlfriend's mother, Raymond eliminates the middle-woman
- and emulates Oedipus. The tone here is so dry that many viewers
- refuse to see this smart-looking film as a comedy. It is--a comedy of desperation, about a kid who really doesn't want
- to have sex with anyone but himself. The movie is finally predictable,
- but it has connected with a generation that believes it has
- been saddled with the thankless job of raising its own parents.
- </p>
- <p> Hispanic females, late teens and already older than Eve, seek
- communal sisterhood. Motherhood we had forced upon us years
- ago.
- </p>
- <p> In the Echo Park section of Los Angeles, it's hard for a man
- to survive. And it's almost harder for a woman to survive when
- her man is gunned down, sent to jail or on the lam from his
- responsibilities. From this sorority of the damned, writer-director
- Allison Anders (Gas Food Lodging) highlights four young women
- in the episodic MI VIDA LOCA/MY CRAZY LIFE. For them, romantic
- yearning is like an image of lovers on a drive-in movie screen:
- huge and fleeting. The film has too many slow spots, and its
- message is laid on with a trowel, but it has a kind of perverse
- Hollywood glamour. When the camera holds on the gorgeous, thoughtful
- faces of Marlo Marron and Salma Hayek, beauty becomes truth--the repository of hope and despair.
- </p>
- <p> Black male, 12, wishes to play chess and, somehow, stop the
- ghetto madness.
- </p>
- <p> We've seen it all before--if not in movies, then on the local
- news. A boy still in grade school peddles cocaine for drug lords;
- he seems set for a short, brutal sentence in the prison of the
- inner city. But we have not seen that story FRESH, from the
- perspective of young Michael (Sean Nelson), who has a lively
- brain and a vengeful spirit to ensure his success on the streets.
- Nor have we seen the tale through the acute camera eye of writer-director
- Boaz Yakin.
- </p>
- <p> With its forays into Manhattan's Washington Square Park for
- lessons in chess from a sympathetic father figure (here it's
- the always authoritative Samuel L. Jackson), the movie might
- aim to be a Searching for Bobby Fischer in the Hood. But Fresh
- is so much more: a really good film, for a start, made with
- a subtle precision that suggests a Vermeer landscape of the
- ninth circle of hell. Fresh alchemizes the terrifying cliches
- of urban melodrama into annihilating poetry. A guarantee: the
- film's last shot--just a boy's face, in ruins--will break
- your heart.
- </p>
- <p> White male, late 20s, wants to visit Paris, pull off a bank
- heist with a psychotic old friend, and just maybe survive.
- </p>
- <p> All right, just because a film is small, that doesn't guarantee
- it's good. Like Kevin Smith and Quentin Tarantino, Roger Avary
- is a graduate of clerking in video stores--the new film school.
- But Avary, who worked with Tarantino on True Romance and Pulp
- Fiction, has not yet found his voice, at least to judge from
- KILLING ZOE, a noisy heist film with Eric Stoltz as the blase
- American in Paris.
- </p>
- <p> The movie is a replay of Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, a bloody
- study of macho alienation and Method posturing. Jean-Hugues
- Anglade, the French star of Betty Blue, La Femme Nikita and
- the forthcoming Queen Margot, bites off huge chunks of scenery
- as the nutty gang leader; his performance is a great geyser
- of bad acting.
- </p>
- <p> White female, fun-loving, 20s, wants to meet some hot babes.
- </p>
- <p> GO FISH, written by Guinevere Turner (who is also a charmer
- in the lead role of Max) and Rose Troche, and directed by Troche,
- offers a radical take on lesbians: they're human beings. Imagine!
- They can be funny and horny. They look for love and, when they're
- not looking, fall in it. Max, "a carefree Sappho lesbo," hooks
- up with gawky Ely (V.S. Brodie), who finds it hard to commit
- to anything, even a haircut. And just like real people--oh,
- yes--lesbians can be long-winded, tortured and smug.
- </p>
- <p> The movie makes an asset of its minimal budget by interpolating
- abstract footage and a few surreal "trial" sequences that both
- tease and pay homage to gay feminism. For the uninitiated, there
- are a few comic "inside" glimpses, as when Max and her clan
- gossip about lesbians in history, from k.d. lang all the way
- back to Eve. At heart, though, Go Fish is a chummy date movie
- about the mundane, urgent business of finding a lover. Max could
- be any teen on the Friday-night prowl, but with a nice bending
- of Hollywood theology: girl meets girl, girl gets girl, nobody
- goes berserk.
- </p>
- <p> Very white males, 20s, wish the world would accept them for
- what they are: American yuppies, and isn't that enough?
- </p>
- <p> Whit Stillman always stands out in the grungy group portrait
- of American independents: he's the one in the navy-blue blazer
- and old school tie. In METROPOLITAN, released in 1990, he created
- an engaging circle of Manhattan debs and preppies, enthralled
- by their own obsolescence. In Barcelona, on a larger canvas,
- Stillman paints a sympathetic portrait of two Americans--Ted
- (Taylor Nichols), a genteel businessman, and his snarkier cousin,
- Fred (Chris Eigeman), a naval officer--adrift in Spain during
- what the film, with beguiling pomposity, calls "the last decade
- of the cold war."
- </p>
- <p> Two movies into what deserves to be a long and unfettered career,
- Stillman has fashioned a subspecies of civilized male that is
- as well defined as a Fitzgerald beau or a Cheever suburbanite.
- They are the young, Reagan-bred Republicans who astounded their
- parents by turning out exactly like them, but with a coating
- of Lettermanesque irony. They see The Graduate from the viewpoint
- of the spurned, stuffy groom. They believe that being a salesman
- is "not just a job but a culture." They read the Bible while
- dancing alone to Glenn Miller's PEnnsylvania 6-5000. And when
- they encounter sensuous senoritas who declare, "I don't go to
- bed with just anyone anymore--I have to be attracted to him
- sexually," these paragons of starched Waspness engage in prime
- Whit Stillman cross talk:
- <list>
- Ted: Spanish girls are very promiscuous.
- Fred: You're such a prig.
- Ted: I wasn't using promiscuous pejoratively.
- Fred: I wasn't using prig pejoratively.
- </list>
- </p>
- <p> Barcelona has been scorned in some corners for wearing its conservatism
- on its tailored sleeve. But no film, especially an independent
- film, should hew to a company line of political rectitude. Besides,
- a Stillman movie delights because it shows its men-about-town
- to be just as estranged as any deli clerk or Harlem youth. And
- how eager they all are for love--as eager as any downtown
- lesbians. Barcelona is just that kind of post-modern romance:
- a G.O.P. Fish.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-