The Wackness
What a refreshing surprise! Â In short, it’s a coming-of-age movie dealing with first loves, last summers before college, and trouble at home. Â But that’s merely the plot that takes us from place to place.
It was a surreal, bittersweet dreamscape movie similar to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Â The cinematography really sells the random uncertainty of what we see in our dreams. Â Not very often do you see things clearly. Â Rooms are shrouded in darkness, silhouettes barely lit by their edges by a single light way off in the distance. Â A shallow focus blurs out everything in the periphery, and extreme close-ups swallow you in the raw essence of the here and now. Â Sometimes the camera bobs and rolls, the action sped up or slowed down, and individual sounds or random background elements aggressively take the fore. Â A lot of what you see is just shapes and colors, all of it open to interpretation. Â Time jumps happen making you uncertain of where you are and how you got to this point.
Taking place inside this audio/visual framework is an unlikely bro-mance between a drugged out, old shrink Jeff (or “Mr. Dr. Squires”) and his young patient/dealer Luke. Â They’re unlikely best friends, offering each other advice good and bad and serving as each other’s emotional rock during their individual and shared experiences getting into trouble. Â Their maturity sometimes switches places, both having a chance to be the “big brother”/”father figure.”
The soundtrack is mostly good old ’90s hip-hop from long before it turned from rap-to-crap and drowned the Top 40 airwaves and nightclubs. Â The lead character is a drug-dealing white teen, but his music influences the way he speaks. Â He’s not a gangsta, but he talks like a thug. Â It’s often comic when he (and eventually his older friend) slip into manners of speech that seem less than fitting with the otherwise “normal white guy” way they look. Â One especially funny moment is when Luke is rehearsing how he’ll tell a girl “I love you” in the mirror several ways before thugging it up and casually calling her his shorty.
Acting is 100% stellar all around and everyone really owns and lives their character.
Highly recommended.