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Igby Goes Down is an
up-to-the-minute coming of age story--a Catcher in the Rye for a more cynical age--and its hero, Jason
'Igby' Slocumb, Jr. (Kieran Culkin), is a Holden Caulfield for the 21st century. From a
moneyed family, he's 17, alienated, bouncing from school to school, a black sheep
rebelling against the world in which he has grown up, a world that has neither earned his
respect nor provided a single role model worthy of emulation.
Burr Steers, who debuts with Igby
both as writer and director, comes bucking into the cinematic arena like a seasoned
cowboy. He's made a fresh, accomplished film in marked contrast to some of the
underwhelming recent efforts of the established but tired wunderkinds--Soderbergh's Full Frontal, Mendes' Road to Perdition, Sayles' Sunshine State.
Igby's mother, Mimi (Susan Sarandon, dead-on once again), is vain,
spoiled, judgmental, demanding, and domineering. She's riding a seesaw of uppers and
downers--a prime example of the legal addictions of the rich. His father, Jason (excellent
Bill Pullman with not enough to do here), is a sweet guy who has retreated from reality in
a schizophrenic haze, feeling crushed by the pressures of life. Igby's brother, Oliver
(Ryan Pillippe) is a handsome, ambitious preppy who invests new meanings in the words
"selfish" and "self-serving." Mimi's ice-water-for-blood flows
in Oliver's veins as well. Trying to explain Igby's erratic behavior, Mimi says, "His creation was an act of animosity. Why shouldn't
his life be?"
Then there's Igby's godfather, D.H. Banes (Jeff Goldblum), who has a
boozy wife at home (Kathleen Gati), but seems inordinately close to Mimi, as well as
maintaining young Rachel (Amanda Peet) in a stylish loft. D.H. is a real estate mogul who
believes that "families should be run like companies." (In view of current
corporate events, that line takes on added resonance.)
Rachel tries hard to please D.H.; the reasons for her dependency become
clear before long. In a bitterly sad scene, she dresses up in Chanel, trying to please
D.H. when she meets him for lunch. He walks out on her; she's completely misunderstood her
role--she's not his fashionable peer, she's his disposable bimbo. Rachel's friend Russell
(Jared Harris) is thrown in to spoof pretentiousness in the art world, or, perhaps more
accurately, artistic pretension in the drug world.
The one near soul-mate Igby finds is Sookie Sapperstein (Clare Danes),
a Bennington undergrad (on a leave of absence) who shares some of his values and his bed.
She was adopted: "I was, like, their vanity project," she says.
Igby Goes Down deftly creates individualized characters who
are not just notches in a checklist of satirical targets. Unlike The Royal Tenenbaums,
which covers overlapping territory but doesn't achieve a single three-dimensional
character, these are people who feel real and about whom one can care--one way or another.
The film mercilessly satirizes contemporary life among the affluent and at the same time
is uproariously full of very funny lines (a level of wit also notably missing from the Tenenbaums).
Richly observant of contemporary mores and very dark, indeed, in its view of the world it
inhabits, Igby Goes Down never sacrifices the humanity of its characters. Before
Igby rides off into the sunset, it is made clear (without sentimentality) that, for all
their mistreatment of him, Igby retains a deep and loving connection to his family. Having
experienced these rites of passage, however, he now has a more accurate perspective on the
contradictions and complexities inherent in these relationships. He is free to move
on.
- Arthur Lazere