Lyn Vaus, Sandi Carroll, Job Emerson. (Not Rated,
90 min.)
Brillo-haired, lizard-lidded Lyn Vaus is what you might call the definitive slacker:
homeless, jobless, scamming free meals off Hare Krishnas, trudging around Boston's
bohemia shooting video of his layabout friends for a dubious-sounding movie that
will "define our generation." His ultimate dream in life? Trekking to remote Patagonia
for a bonding experience with - but of course - the Giant Sloth of Indian legend.
All that stands in the way of his triumphal journey is an 80-mile marsh (the "Darien
Gap") which cuts off the Pan-American Highway in Central America. This summary brings
you fully up to speed on the sensibilities of director Brad Anderson's 1994 indie
feature. Whimsical, eccentric, and full of earnestly cornball symbolism, it's shot
through with Gen-X stereotypes, yet blessed with a disarming self-awareness that
helps you easily overlook its minor failings. Vaus, played by a Boston musician of
the same name, is a perfect centerpiece for Anderson's gently melancholic humor.
A doughy, misfit artist-manqué who blames his parents' broken marriage ("All
generations have their excuses for fucking up," one character says, "but ours is
the lamest... divorce"), he dreams of love, success, and a career, but can't muster
the commitment to win them. Like his feckless actor father (Emerson) before him,
he responds to stress chiefly by taking vacations. Predictably, his energetic fashion
designer girlfriend, Polly Joy (Carroll, a terrific actress whom I peg for future
stardom) is getting fed up with Lyn's hothouse flower temperament. By tossing him
out of her life and apartment, she sends him a clear message that it's time to escape
the holding pattern in which his life is stuck. But The Darien Gap doesn't rely on
the resolution of this or its other minor plotlines to hold your attention. Instead,
this offhandedly incisive, soulful, visually inventive movie draws you in with the
seductiveness of a funny, rambling story told by a tipsy ex-lover in a warm room
on a cool autumn night. The allure isn't the substance of the tale but the poignant,
openhearted manner in which it's told.
3.0 stars
--Russell Smith
Other Films by Brad Anderson
Next Stop Wonderland 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Man on the Moon 
It's in the Water 
Dream With The Fishes 
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