Gus Van Sant

Don't Worry, He Won't Get Far On Foot

First Hit: A unhurried film revealing the power of how forgiveness of others and self, can make one’s life different.

Many of us know of people who have struggled and paid prices by their addiction to alcohol. Here we get a glimpse into the life of cartoonist John Callahan (Joaquin Phoenix). As an orphan he struggled early with his own identity and reconciling his life. He claimed he knew “three things about my mom; she was Irish, had red hair, and she was a school teacher. Oh, yeah, and she didn’t want me. I guess that makes four things.”

He was molested at age eight by a school teacher and began drinking by age twelve. He claims that the last day he walked, he woke up with a hangover.

The film spends a fair amount of time showing the audience how blatantly he liked his drinking. One scene that exemplifies his cluelessness to his drinking is when he’s walking along a beach, he spies a beautiful young woman surfer. He tries a pickup line from a song, offers her a drink from the bottle he’s got in his pocket, and her look of polite disgust, says it all.

The film follows his journey of drinking and when he meets Dexter (Jack Black), the two magnificent partier’s have a wild night of drinking. It finally ends with Dexter driving John’s car, having an accident, leaving John a quadriplegic, and Dexter walks away with a few scratches.

As you might imagine, he’s angry at his predicament and takes it out on a number of people who are attempting to help him. However, one person who comes to help him weekly was Annu (Rooney Mara). She’s assists people who have a physical handicap. The way she enters the scene, she’s angelic and that’s exactly how John sees her.

One of the people he needs for support and whom he also antagonistic towards, is Suzanne (Carrie Brownstein) who oversees monitoring social, services expenses to keep him in an apartment, with wheelchairs, and covering medical costs including Tim (Tony Greenhand) who takes care of John. Tim’s job is to wash John, do his grocery shopping and clean his house.

Eventually, John finds himself going to an AA meeting, but he doesn’t speak much. Eventually he gets a sponsor named Donnie (Jonah Hill). Donnie is rich, gay, and calls the people he sponsors “piglets.”

He begins to draw crudely renditioned cartoons using his two handicapped hands pressed together to hold the pen. They are very funny because they are extremely poignant and targeted. One that I easily recall from the film shows two men in sheets (as KKK people), talking to each other, and one says, “Don’t you love it when they’re still warm from the dryer?” Another caption is the title to this film, where a small band of cowboys are in the desert find an empty wheelchair and the lead cowboy says “(see movie title)”

The group he sponsors are wildly honest and engaging to watch while they work out their stuff in front of one another.

When Donnie tells John to work on AA's Step 9, which is about making amends, he begins to see the power of forgiveness.

Phoenix was powerful in his portrayal of Callahan. He definitely shared a depth of pain in never thinking his mother wanted him. Black was perfect as his alcoholic friend. The scene when John comes to make amends is with Dexter was extremely well done. Mara was fantastic as a woman who always looked passed John’s handicaps and appreciated him for him. Brownstein was excellent as the caring yet restricted by policy social worker. Greenhand did a great job as the caretaker. Hill was amazing as the AA sponsor and friend. John Callahan wrote a pointed and direct script. Gus Van Sant directed this thoughtful film.

Overall: This probably isn’t everyone’s kind of film, but as the ending began to reveal itself, I loved the theme of forgiveness.

Milk

First Hit: Gus Van Sant did a fantastic job of recreating the feel of the 1970s gay movement in San Francisco and with Sean Penn as Milk, the film becomes an essential link to the gay movement and events of this time.

Sean Penn plays Harvey Milk the first openly gay, “major” government office holder in the United States.

The key words here were openly gay.

Milk believed that one’s power and strength lived in the realm of being open with one's orientation versus hiding and keeping yourself in the closet. He often asked his staff and other people he recruited to gain their individual power by coming out to friends and family. By doing so he realized that having just one friend or relative who was sympathetic to the person coming out would double the number of votes on important issues.

This happened when Proposition 6 went down into defeat in the State of California. The proposition was aimed at not allowing gays to teach in schools. This was one of many different issues Milk pushed for.

The film documents his rise in the Castro district of San Francisco to be the “Mayor of The Castro” and eventually become elected to the Board of Supervisors. Harvey was effective in working with other groups to make changes in the way the city worked.

During their association on the Board, Milk made numerous attempts to assist Dan White (played by Josh Brolin) another Supervisor who was having problems getting his legislation passed. Dan felt Harvey had too much influence on the Mayor Moscone and was jealous because Harvey was getting things done. Under financial pressure and the difficulty in working with the board, Dan resigned.

He recanted his resignation the next day and wanted back on the Board of Supervisors. The Mayor under some guidance of Harvey refused to reappoint Dan. Dan, who was deeply hurt by this and ended up killing both the Mayor and Milk.

Gus did an extraordinary job of weaving real 1970’s footage into the film. It felt seamless. Sean Penn capture the spirit of Harvey and his empathetic way of recruiting people. Josh Brolin carried the conflicted Dan convincingly.

Overall: This is one of the best biographical films made about a political figure, ever.

Paranoid Park

First Hit: This is a very good Gus Van Sant directed film. I loved the fluidity in which it was filmed in both Super 8 and 35mm and how the character slowly and fluidly understands what happened one night.

Alex (played by Gabe Nevins) is a directionless teenager who admires the good skateboarders at Paranoid Park. He lacks confidence in his own ability to skate at the Park so he practices out of the sight of others. Paranoid Park, which is an illegal skate park, is used and was built by skaters and is under a freeway.

Alex goes there with his slightly older friend Jared (played by Jake Miller) to watch and learn how to skate better and because he feels at home there with the other skaters.

The film begins when Alex is called into the school office to talk to a detective who questions him about the death of a train yard Security Guard who was cut in-half by a passing train. We also discover that this man was hit on the head first by a skateboard which was fished out of the river.

His friend Macy (played by Laura McKinney) notices that he’s struggling and confused and suggests writing down what is bothering him, like a letter. By doing this, she explains, then sending it to someone else, burning it, or giving it to her will help him with his troubles.

During the film Alex writes pieces of the story which lead the viewer to better understand his interactions, intentions and experience with his girlfriend, some older guys at the skate park, Macy, and his dad. The film fluidly moves between the past, present and future. The ability to use Super 8mm film with little light and marry it with and 35mm film in most other scenes was inventively good and gave the film the feel as if you were with him at the skate park and on his terms. Additionally Van Sant did an excellent job of mixing slow motion, lighting, and long languid shots to create and expressive film.

Overall: Fluid was the word that stayed with me throughout my viewing. I really liked how this film held and embraced youth and in particularly this lost confused young man who is attempting to understand recent events.

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