Shayne Gray, Thang Chan, Rachel Van Huss. (Not Rated,
85 min.)
Director Ira Sachs clearly has a lot to say, and he seems hell-bent on getting it
all into his 85-minute debut feature. Sexual orientation crises, class and racial
divisions, cultural aftershocks of the Vietnam war, dysfunctional families and teen
sociology in the new South are all dealt with willy-nilly in a great-looking but
rather unsatisfying movie that's more a display of raw filmmaking tools than a coherent
artistic statement. In the center of Sachs' ambitious muddle is Lincoln Bloom (Gray),
a well-off Memphis teen with major sexual identity issues. When, in an early scene,
he leaves the family dinner table to masturbate, the object of his onanistic fixation
could either be blond princess girlfriend Rachel (Van Huss) or the Vietnamese gay
hustler (Chan) with whom he did the nasty the night before. Lincoln's remote manner
toward Rachel is egregious even within a wasted social circle whose members spend
most of their time getting stoned and making a circuit of parties and clubs, each
more dismal than the one before. But when Lincoln re-encounters the young immigrant
hustler, a half-black American serviceman's offspring named Minh, he's caught off
guard by the older boy's vitality and flamboyantly romantic manner. Impulsively,
the guys take off down the river on a boat owned by Lincoln's dad. Their brief Huck-and-Jim
getaway is a tender interlude that, because of their disparate cultural perspectives
and emotional makeups, has far deeper significance to Minh than Lincoln. For the
callow, soulless Lincoln, it's just a temporary diversion from his irresolute drift
back to a safer, more conventional lifestyle. But for Minh, the brush-off by Lincoln
is a shattering experience, the harshest in a long series of rejections, which leads
to a shocking conclusion that delivers the movie's one big emotional punch. Gray
and Chan, like the other cast members, are raw neophytes recruited by Sachs for look
and style, not acting polish. It's a nervy approach that, along with Sachs' veristic
dialogue, creates a predictably ragged, acting-workshop feel with the inevitable
mix of spontaneous combustion and wheel-spinning tedium. There's a marginally acceptable
amount of the latter, but far more problematic is the groaning cargo of symbolic
import that Sachs wants to impose upon Minh and Lincoln's fleeting encounter. And
on a more basic level, I simply found it so hard to penetrate the two main characters'
cauterized psyches that, in the end, I hardly gave a damn what happened to them.
Unfortunately, for all his obvious latent talent, Sachs seems to have run afoul of
a basic creative pitfall: the tendency of art that takes aimlessness and sterility
as its dominant subjects to register as both.
2.5 stars
--Russell Smith
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