
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
|
|
In prison awaiting trial for the murder of a retarded boy, an articulate,
too-sensitive-for-this-world teenager (Ryan Gosling) renames his social science workbook
The United States of Leland and fills its pages with an attempt to tell his
story. He cant remember much the details of the actual killing are so foggy
it seems at one point that writer/director Matthew Ryan Hoge must intend us to suspect
that hes been framed but he knows how he felt. The United States of Leland hooks the audience
with the promise of seeing this frail, sweet boy turn vicious thug by films end.
Theres nothing that prurient here: the film is a moody watercolor, unformed and
hazy, with the violent act refracted and sublimated into a seventeen year olds lesson in philosophy. If Holden
Caufield had a gun and smiled more often, this could be his story.
Hoge structures the story in intricate flashbacks interwoven with
voice-over from Lelands journal. Hes able to keep writing because hes
being exploited by his prison teacher, Pearl Madison (Don Cheadle), a failed writer who
smells a novel in Lelands case. (Its telling that Hoge wont nail down
what could lead Leland from simple alienation to murder but takes a few minutes to allow
Pearl to explain the origin of his first name.) Madison's ambition is complicated by the
fact that he is barred from speaking to Leland outside of class as well as by
Lelands father Albert, a great novelist with a nasty reputation (Kevin Spacey),
whos shown up for the trial after years living abroad.
Leland met his victim, Ryan (Michael Welch), through Ryans older
sister, Becky (Jena Malone). Beckys been placed in a private school after running
away with a drug dealer and she responds to Lelands ingenuous warmth. They become
good friends, though she remains too attached to her jailed dealer boyfriend to go further
with Leland.
Becky has a complicated
home life. Her parents allow her older sister Julies boyfriend, Allen (Chris Klein),
to live in the house, and at seventeen hes already Moms favorite in-law. She
dotes on this gentle, puppyish boy who wants to go off to college with her daughter, who
for her part wants out of a relationship that feels clammily incestuous. No one seems to
believe that Becky has reformed (indeed, in her first scene shes shooting up in her
bedroom), though no one says as much, and when her boyfriend is released from jail, the
family tensions come to a head.
For his part, Leland is completely estranged from his father. Dad buys
off his guilt by giving Leland plane tickets each summer with the implicit understanding
that they wont really meet up. Leland gets to roam New York City unimpeded by adults
instead. Spacey delivers his most toothless creep here; though he generates most of
the films tension, the sly, coiling intelligence of his best work is missing. When
Pearl comes to understand his motivations (why would this absentee father suddenly appear
when his sons been arrested for an atrocity?), its less of a shock than a
given, a surprise the audience understood in his first appearance.
The films best scenes take place in the prison library, as Pearl
grills Leland. Hoge carefully undermines Pearl from the start, so that his pose as
Lelands benefactor, however sincere, is compromised. In the films smartest
touch, Leland understands this well before Pearl himself does. There are several moments
were Gosling channels Spaceys better performances, encouraging the sense that Leland
isnt being exploited at all. Instead, hes using Pearl for his own purposes,
setting him up for something. In a film that insists on the ingenuous purity of its
murderous protagonist, these moments are enormously suggestive, and for a while the story
seems poised to leap into a startling new direction. It never does.
In its way, The United States
of Leland is a model independent feature: modestly scaled but ambitious, well acted,
intelligent. Yet its a fundamentally cautious piece. Every character is given a
scene or two to explain and round out their motivations, with the effect of
dampening any possibility of surprise. (When Pearl, whose girlfriend has been away for
weeks, meets a pretty receptionist, its obvious that they will sleep together and
that he will regret it. Shes a plot device and nothing more, in the film only to
make points about Pearl.) Its tidy in all the least important ways, with all the
questions that dont demand answers explained and all those that do left open. In Elephant,
Gus Van Sant took on a similarly inexplicable event and also refused to provide grand
answers where none exist. But Van Sant made his refusal of pat answers a structural
device, and the film had none of the trappings of the well-made film: everything about it
was evocative and open-ended, each shot posing questions for the audience. Hoge explains
it all for us; everything, that is, except what we want to know.
- Gary Mairs