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CB radios and a lot of other moldy
devices make a comeback in John Dahls Joy Ride.
This thriller, about a trio of young adults who are terrorized by an anonymous trucker
while driving cross-country, is a briskly directed affair, so streamlined that it plays
less like a movie than a dramatized urban legend. But like most urban legends,
theres a camp retreat air about it that makes it impossible to take seriously. It
suffers from timidityit isnt ruthless enough to finish the job it
beginsand it begins evaporating in your mind before its even over.
College freshman Lewis Thomas (the
vapidly handsome Paul Walker) is on his way to pick up his close friend Venna (Leelee
Sobieski) in Colorado, from where they plan to drive home to New Jersey for summer
vacation. But Lewis spontaneously swings his car around when he learns that his older
brother, Fuller (Steve Zahn), the black sheep of the family, has been jailed on a petty
offense. With the loose cannon Fuller now in tow, Lewis resumes his journey, all the while
resisting Fullers blandishments to create mischief. One of these ideas involves a
used CB radio that Fuller has installed in Lewis car. Using a combustible form of
psychological warfare, Fuller pressures his kid brother into crooning out (in the least
feminine voice youve ever heard) a sexual invitation to a trucker known only by the
handle Rusty Nail. But the prank blows up in the boys faces when Rusty
Nail realizes hes been had. Operating from behind the anonymity of his tinted
windshield (with its strings of lights and shiny body, his truck looks as if one of the
UFOs in Close Encounters of the Third Kind had sprouted wheels and taken to
the highway), Rusty Nail begins terrorizing the brothers in an increasingly deadly
cat-and-mouse game.
When the guys pick Venna up, they
dont mention whats happened in the hopes that theyve shaken their
hunter. But as soon as they retake the road, Rusty Nail is right on their tail again, and
the succulent blonde in their presence causes him to redouble his efforts. With his truck
that can serve as a multi-ton battering ram one second and vanish in a cloud of exhaust
the next, and his mysterious ability to keep tabs on the brothers at all times, Rusty Nail
is an almost supernatural presence, so fearsome that even the freewheeling Fuller is
shocked to his senses. (Which is a shame: Steve Zahn is a lot more fun as a nut-case
lowlife than as a sensibly frightened young man.) Nothing the brothers
doapologizing, appealing to the law, running faster, running slowercan throw
the vengeful trucker off their trail.
At one point
while flipping the TV channel in their motel room, Fuller asks Lewis, Are you in the
mood for a story or, like, a collection of scenes? Its a question that Clay
Tarver and J.J. Abramas should have cut from their script because it only draws attention
to the fact that Joy Ride is a collection of
scenes, and not, like, a story. Again and again
it holds out ideasLewis struggle for independence from his domineering older
brother, his inability to reveal his feelings for Venna to her, Fullers readiness to
betray Lewis by pursuing Venna himselfthat it drops as soon as it utters them. Some
scenes are developed for a seeming eternity yet come to nothing, such as a false alarm
revolving around a credit card. Steven Spielbergs similarly-plotted TV movie Duel offered
the barest existential motivation for its madman truckers pursuit of Dennis Weaver,
a far more satisfying choice than Joy Rides
decision to build a movies worth of action around a junior high school prank. In its
earlier drafts Joy Ride may have been meant as
an allegory about the pitfalls of coming into adulthood, but whatever serious intent it
once had is undone by its reliance on genre cliches, capped by a cynically predictable
final twist. (Even on its own merits the twist doesnt workits made
implausible by something that happens just before it occurs.)
Familiarity
doesnt always breed contempt; sometimes it just induces lethargy. Dahl makes
directorial decisionsshooting in heavy neon reds, squeezing his characters into
airless little pockets of spaceas if hes working from a checklist. This
isnt the stuff of nightmares; its just obvious filmmaking. Nor does it help
that Dahl has such little feeling for rural America. This is a movie that cries out for a
little grounding in the real world because every situation in it feels workshopped to
death. The supporting actors seem to have been cast for their physically freakish
qualitiesa beak-like nose, a pair of front teeth as large as Bugs
Bunnysbut clearly none were picked for their acting skill. When a macho barfly
begins making ugly comments to Venna, its the coarseness of the scenes
conception, not the guys crudity, thats the real turn-off.
Like many thrillers, Joy Ride is at its best when little seems to be
happening. The moments in which the camera fixates on the CBs red and yellow LED
display just before Rusty Nails sex-tinged voice rematerializes in the darkness are
far spookier than any of the mayhem wreaked by the massive semi. When the brothers,
rendered impotent by guilt and horror, stand transfixed by the muffled sounds of violence
coming from the motel room next door, its a purer homage to Hitchcock than Brian De
Palma ever dreamed of. And Joy Ride offers one
original note when its formulaic rhythms slacken to allow the relatively pastoral scene in
which the brothers pick Venna up at her campus. Theyre convinced that the nightmare
is behind them, and though we want to believe it is too, we know that time isnt on
our sidethe movie is scarcely halfway over.
Joy Ride, with its faceless
implacable foe ladling out retribution for the young protagonists sexual misdeeds,
is rooted less in noirthe genre in which
Dahl made his reputationthan in slasher films. Although the movie is embroidered
with erotic threads, they only amount to filigree. Where a movie such as Blue Velvet explored sexual
initiation rites to their logical (if extreme) conclusions, Joy Ride doesnt go any deeper than PG-13
shots of a braless Sobieski. This isnt Joy
Rides only failure of nerve. In scale and tone it calls to mind Robert
Harmons The Hitcher, but Joy Ride lacks anything like the ghastly wake-up
call the audience received late in that pictureJoy
Ride just puts you to sleep and leaves you there. Its pulp fiction without a
nerve center.
- Tom Block