D: James Merendino; with Matthew Lillard, Michael Goorjian, Annabeth Gish,
Jennifer Lien, Christopher McDonald, Devon Sawa, Jason Segel, Summer Phoenix, James
Duval. (R, 97 min.)
How Jan De Bont ended up as one of three executive producers on this goofily affecting
coming-of-rage story is a story in itself (and one that I don't have room to go into
here), though we should all be thankful Lillard (Scream, Wing Commander) stars --
and not Keanu. Lillard cuts a fine figure as 18-year-old punk rawker Stevo, a blue-haired,
self-proclaimed anarchist trapped, for the moment, in the decidedly un-punk locale
of Salt Lake City (hence SLC) circa 1985. While the rest of the U.S. was busily shaving
their heads and mourning the passing of Minor Threat and the Misfits, Stevo and his
best bud "Heroin" Bob (Goorjian) make do with what they have, which is, essentially,
nothing. Bob, his nickname affixed as an ironic twist on the fact that he can stand
neither needles nor drugs, is the angrier of the pair, a shoddily mohawked Crass-punk
wannabe, who, along with Stevo, spends his time drinking, drinking, and hollering
obscenities in between drinks. Stevo, on the other hand, finds his lifestyle cramped
by his ex-hippie dad, now a high-powered lawyer and single cad-about-town. Vowing
never to follow in such ungainly footsteps, Stevo dedicates his life to anarchism,
which in this case involves hanging out in the duo's ratty warehouse and carousing
with the local mods and skins. There's not much else going on in Merendino's film,
though as a portrait of an unlikely mid-Eighties punk scene, I've lived through worse.
What works here -- to a point -- is Merendino's snazzy, balls-to-the-wall direction,
a stuttering mélange of wild angles, slo-mo, LSD-inspired dream sequences, spotty
in-camera edits, and scene after scene of our boy Stevo kickin' down that inimitable
fourth wall with enough smarmy, cynical attitude to make David Spade look like Martha
Stewart. Frequently turning to the camera to expound and explain the whys and wherefores
of the SLC punk scene, Stevo ingratiates himself with the audience by sheer virtue
of his gangly chutzpah. Clearly, this is a guy who could sell a Nazi skin a lifetime
membership in Sy Sperling's Hair Club for Men. Explaining the nature of punk rock
fighting, Stevo admits he doesn't know why it happens, and instead offers up an animated
version of the prototypical punk skirmish, complete with diagrams and flying body
parts. Lillard is the focus here, but Goorjian, as Bob, is the breakout scenemaker,
casting his hormonally challenged nail-biter as a fully rounded (albeit mildly defective)
human, and making the one-two sucker punch at the film's end that much more powerful.
Merendino's film is lacking the streamlined cohesion it needs to spike itself in
your cortex as hoped, but it is about as accurate a punk film as I've seen in some
time, especially when it comes to the horrors and boredoms of small-scene life.
2.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
SLC Punk! 
Capsule Reviews
SLC Punk! 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Sweet and Lowdown 
Bullets Over Broadway 
It's in the Water 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by James Merendino at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|