Showing posts with label Brad Renfro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brad Renfro. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Ghost World














GHOST WORLD              A-            
USA  Great Britain  Germany  (111 mi)  2001  d:  Terry Zwigoff      

Creeps and losers and weirdos, these are our people.            —Enid (Thora Birch)   

Much like Zwigoff's brilliant documentary exposé Crumb (1995) that focuses on the tragic life of comic artist R. Crumb, who combats the horribly damaged tragedy in his own life with his fiercely savage art, this film perceptively creates sympathy for the lives of social misfits and alienated outcasts who counteract the stigma of social ostracism with biting sarcasm and acerbic wit.  One of the better films that provides mood, atmosphere, and comic insight into the acute sensibilities of teenagers, showing how easily they remain stuck inside their self-absorbed worlds, where due to the level of conformity demanded in high school and as major consumers of mass culture, despite their need to be an “individual,” it’s so easy to pass judgment on others who are different, developing social tiers of popularity based on where you fit in.  Adapted by the director along with Chicago screenwriter and graphic comic artist Dan Clowes from his original comic book novel by the same name, eight installments serialized in Eightball from 1993–97, the story focuses on the life of best friends Enid (Thora Birch) and Rebecca (Scarlett Johansson), two teenagers that don’t fit in, that both lie outside the social mainstream, yet maintain some degree of sanity by continually mocking and satirically poking fun of others, continually commenting on how fake and shallow the world is with a kind of corrosively sarcastic humor.  In this way they carve out their own niche of outsiderist respectability, but once the safety net of high school has been pulled away, they have no one left to target, as they are suddenly thrust into the real world, where at their lame graduation party Rebecca points out, “We'll never see Todd again,” knowing that their targets of playful fun will suddenly disappear.  While Rebecca is much more likely to fit into the consumerist “mall world,” doing what’s expected of her though hating every minute, leading a considerably downbeat existence, thinking everybody around her sucks, Enid takes a stand against this blatant conformity, which she does at great risk, as she only alienates herself from everyone she knows, none of whom are smart enough to understand her particular brand of satire, which goes completely over their heads.  Enid changes her outfits and looks throughout, making a post modernist fashion statement on the 70’s punk rebellion, complete with green hair, while just as easily shifting to the chic Audrey Hepburn look of the 1960’s.        

The irony of it all, despite being among the most clever students, Enid’s graduation is contingent upon passing a make-up class over summer school, having failed art class.  Enid has uncanny artistic talent on display, which we see in her diary notebook, which is largely a collection of sketches, and the film itself seems to be a series of vignettes conceived from her astutely keen observation skills.  Using deadpan wit to target what’s supposed to be trendy and cool, initially the two friends continue their same old pranks, where they visit a cute convenience store clerk, Josh (Brad Renfro), harassing him for a ride in his car, torturing him with their girlish attention, which is their way of liking a guy.  When they visit a local hang out together, it’s a fake 50’s diner that plays rap music on the jukebox, otherwise surrounded by faceless establishments like McDonald’s and Starbucks that litter the suburban landscape, where whatever traits their town once displayed have been sucked out of existence by consumer culture.  On a lark, as they have nothing better to do, they decide to harass a guy placing an ad in the Personals, making fun of him, responding to his ad, and then watching him suffer when no one comes to meet him, calling the guy an obvious dork, especially when he gets pissed off afterwards.  But they see him again at a rummage sale and learn his name is Seymour, Steve Buscemi in one of his best roles, a guy obsessed with old records, where he has an unsurpassed collection of vintage 78’s, which have little to no use to anyone other than himself.  Peculiarly, Enid finds this somewhat fascinating, as rather than a total fuck up, like most deluded and vacuous guys obsessed with sports and Adidas shoes, this guy knows his own interests.  While Seymour could just as easily be a Trekkie, he’s instead a hater of over-produced commercial radio and thrives on authentic musical recordings, knowing all the trivial details about lost and forgotten artists, much like these disappearing towns that are being bought out by consumer retail outlets and replicated chain stores.

Enid’s summer school class becomes interwoven with her life, where her over-exuberant teacher, Illiana Douglas, is the exact opposite of the more socially detached Enid, wearing her enthusiasm for self-expression-as-the-meaning-of-art on her sleeve, literally pushing each student to find their inner soul and express themselves.  Enid keeps questioning her own identity, showing a preference for the undiscovered world of Seymour’s vintage classics to the contemporary music of her age.  Meanwhile Rebecca nags at Enid to find a job, as they’re planning to move in together, but Enid can’t hold a job, as she’s simply too honest with the customers and can’t understand how any self-respecting person would lower themselves to the demeaning tasks required.  “It’s not optional!” she’s told when varying from the corporate research designed customer script that attempts to manipulate the customer into spending more money.  Enid desperately tries to maintain her integrity when all around her people are losing theirs, including her best friend who finds it much easier to sell out to corporate culture.  Enid is a throwback to Holden Caulfield in The Catcher in the Rye, perhaps universally adored for his refusal to become a phony or submit to the growing adult hypocrisy surrounding him, holding fast to principles easily surrendered by everybody else, including family and friends.  The ultimate tragedy, perhaps best expressed by Jason Robards in A THOUSAND CLOWNS (1965), is caving in to the generic conventionality of corporate submission in a mass culture that refuses to embrace originality.  Capturing the provocative tone of the underground comic, a film where a clueless video store clerk thinks 9 ½ WEEKS is the same as Fellini's movie 8 ½, Enid is endearingly original, but in life after high school, society has no place for her, reflected in her inability to pass art class, the subject that she actually excels in.  Underlying the laughs and the satiric wit are superb performances by Thora Birch and Steve Buscemi, both of whom are at their best here, each on the outer fringe struggling to find a place in the world, both all the more lovable for it.