|
Press play Going
blank again THE SOUNDTRACK FROM Garden State
(Twentieth Century Fox Home Video, $29.98) has now infiltrated a healthy percentage
of San Francisco's cafés and boutiques. The country is a-flower with new
Shins fans, while the coffers of Messrs. Simon and Garfunkel, whose "Only
Living Boy in New York" surfaces in the film at a moment of rain-soaked poignancy,
are no doubt ringing with the cl
ink
ing sound of incoming royalties on the
latest round of reunion-tour and greatest-hits albums. And if anecdotal evidence
of an emergent cult can be entered into the record, perhaps it means something
that my housemate's younger sister, a college freshman, came to visit over the
Christmas holidays equipped with a suitably drab Garden State T-shirt the
color of UPS workers' uniforms (promoting itself via self-effacement in the spirit
of the film); matching buttons for her handbag; and knowledge of the DVD's imminent
release date fervently beating inside her brain like an extra pulse. I, too,
was waiting, though I counted my lucky stars when she bought the thing, saving
me the discomfort and embarrassment of a rabid early-morning appearance at the
DVD store. I'd already trekked out to West Portal to see Garden State near
the beginning of its big-screen release. And stood in line again toward the end
of its lengthy run in a (successful) attempt to create a convert (my girlfriend).
And had a temper tantrum when it came in 97th in the Village Voice's film
critics' poll below that life-eating waste of time Coffee and Cigarettes,
far below Anchorman (!) and The Polar Express (!!). Really, what
are the chances that a story about a numb, spaced-out human being reentering Earth's
orbit will have less going for it than the sight of a
bunc
h of famous people chatting
off-script about coffee? Directed, written, and starred in by Scrubs'
Zach Braff, Garden State is sweet and clever and filled with the kind of
tiny, lovable moments the broken-off gas pump handle, the fast-food knight,
the hamster mansion, any shot with Peter Sarsgaard in it that help turn
a movie's audience into a medium-size cult. Many critics have acknowledged these
truths, but also complained about the film's slightness, about Braff's characterless
character: the affect-deficient, emotionally hobbled Andrew Largeman (a name straight
out of AP English), who's chosen a trip home for his mother's funeral to jettison
a 17-year lithium habit and the inappropriate ministrations of his psychiatrist
father. It has been suggested that Andrew's emptiness leaves the film without
a center. Other cavils concern the stock quirkiness of love interest/lifesaver
Sam (Natalie Portman), whose cute meet and subsequent interactions with
Andrew help reveal what sort of person he's managed to become despite the
meds, a fairly original childhood trauma, and the chilly region of familial dysfunction
he's been circling for years. What kind of slight, stock, characterless person
would enjoy, adore, or want to own this film, with all its flaws? Perhaps the
sort who sees traces of familiarity in Andrew's predicament of feeling
closed
off from the events of his own life, or enjoys watching him slowly work his way
in from the perimeter (or just wants to see Natalie Portman go swimming in her
underwear). At every moment of such a story line, there are gaping pitfalls, violin
strings waiting to be plucked, but Braff, a first-time director, shows an admirable
kind of reserve that somewhat mirrors the strangely seductive, quiet blankness
of his character. As a director, he's constantly rejecting the violins and finding
something charming or funny or even emotionally moving to offer instead. There
are problems, mainly with the pacing of Andrew's healing process, which for a
while is enjoyably fractional and then starts to snowball toward film's end
why are endings so perilous in moviemaking? The last few minutes also bear the
inorganic stench of the test screening, whether because there was one, or because
of some other external or internal pressure. Nothing much clears the air on that
point in the DVD version's deleted scenes, or the commentary by Braff and
Portman. However, the latter offering is charming and droll like the film itself,
and pleasantly informative alongside the usual statements of the obvious
and uncomfortable attempts to get through the credits, Braff offers blow-by-blow
allusions to autobiographical detail, visual quoting, and anecdotes borrowed from
the lives of f
riends. O
ther treats include your standard making-of doc, a restrained
collection of bloopers, and more charming commentary by Braff, D.P. Lawrence Sher,
editor Myron Kerstein, and production designer Judy Becker, who gets the lion's
share of Braff's elated praise. In the end, the latter is one of the nicest elements
of the extras: Braff's pleased excitement about the film he and the others have
made proves a sweet antidote to any wash of cross-marketing considered necessary
to keep the cult's membership numbers up. (Lynn Rapoport) Chop shopFrankly,
I've always been partial to Freddy. But the five-disc DVD collection Friday
the 13th: From Crystal Lake to Manhattan (Paramount Home Video, $79.99)
dubbed the "ultimate edition," though you'll have to shell
out separately for Jason Goes to Hell and Jason X has given
me a new appreciation for the man behind the hockey mask. A string of unlucky
Fridays are charted in the series' first eight entries (1980 to 1989), with future
stars like Kevin Bacon and Tony Goldwyn, plu
s countless unknowns, battling the
cranky ex-camper. Parts one and two are fairly similar, though nothing in any
future Friday would ever best Betsy Palmer's turn as Jason's maniacal mama.
Friday the 13th: Part Three is notable for its plunge into 3-D (coming
atcha: snakes, sproi
ng-ing eyebal
ls, assorted weaponry), while the fourth film
(ahem, The Final Chapter) boasts a herky-jerky dancing Crispin Glover and
a monster mask-obsessed Corey Feldman. Parts five (A New Beginning), six
(Jason Lives), and seven (The New Blood) are less distinguished,
though the films bust out grave robbings, troubled youths, in-jokes (especially
part seven), and inevitably at least one scene where Jason crashes through a wall
like the Kool-Aid Man. Part eight (Jason Takes Manhattan) flaunts the best
title, though most of the flick takes place at sea the "money shot"
of Mr. Voorhees stalking through Times Square notwithstanding. Half of the
films come with individual commentaries; the set also packs a bonus DVD with extras.
Each film gets a featurette with directors, makeup experts like the great Tom
Savini, and where-are-they-now cast members (lots of Feldman) enthusiastically
reflecting on their Friday experiences. Fun trivia that emerges: the origins
of Friday's signature sound motif; the fake shooting titles that were often
employed to keep rabid Friday fans at bay; and the director of Jason
Lives still keeps Jason's prop tombstone in his backyard, to the horror of
at least one meter reader. (Cheryl Eddy) Heartbreak motelWim Wenders's
melancholic ode to family and th
e barren, beaut
iful American southwest
Paris, Texas (Fox Home Entertainment, $9.98), finally makes
the leap to DVD, 20 years after its release. As Paris, Texas begins, a
man (Harry Dean Stanton) dressed in a suit and a baseball cap trudges through
the desert; after he's found collapsed in an isolated watering hole, his brother,
Walt (Dean Stockwell), is summoned from Los Angeles. It turns out that Walt hasn't
heard from his kin, who we learn is named Travis, in four years and that Walt
and his wife, Anne (Aurore Clément), have been parenting Travis's young
son, Hunter (Hunter Carson, offspring of Karen Black and writer L.M. Kit Carson,
who assisted with the Paris, Texas screenplay). The whereabouts of Hunter's
mother and Travis's estranged wife, Jane (a luminously blond Nastassja Kinski),
are unknown, other than the fact that she's somewhere in Texas. Road trips dominate
the movie, which was scripted by Sam Shepard, hauntingly scored by Ry Cooder,
and lensed, all gorgeous skies and tricky scenes in cars, by Robby Müeller.
Besides the film itself, the affectionate commentary by Wenders is the disc's
highlight. Unlike so many DVD commentaries, which feel either self-congratulatory
or utterly pointless, Wenders's track covers everything: casting and location
choices, technical quirks (how do you shoot on a set built around a one-wa
y
mirror?), and
Kinski's signature pink sweater, purchased at a garage sale hours
before she wore it in a crucial scene. Less-essential extras include deleted scenes
with optional commentary and a baffling bit of footage dubbed "Kinski in
Cannes," presumably filmed during Paris, Texas's Palme d' Or-winning
stint at the fest. The cast shuffles down the red carpet amid flashbulbs and cries
of "Nastassja! Nastassja!" It's worth a peek just to see Stockwell's
Colonel Sanders-inspired choice in ormal wear. (Eddy) |