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Brendan Frye (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is a teen-age loner compelled to
dive into the gritty underbelly of his high schools social world when his
ex-girlfriend Emily (Emilie de Ravin, Lost)
reaches out to him, only to turn up dead shortly thereafter. Brendan happens to be the
all-knowing, hard-boiled private dick type, not only prepared to take action, kick butt
and roll with the lacerating punches, but worldly-wise and sophisticated far beyond his
years. (At first take Brendans character seems smart, hip in a grunge sort of way.
As a fantasy projection this works; taken as a serious character study his character
rapidly devolves into something puerile and insipid.)
Brendan is able to trust only one person in the whole world, his one
true friend The Brain (Matt OLeary), as he sets out to investigate Emilys
disappearance and murder. Brendan soon finds himself in deeper complications, tangling
with the drug-peddling criminal underworld of his suburban high school. He passes his own
variant spins of what is happening along to the school vice principle (Richard Roundtree),
as if misleading the prison warden about the inmates secret vendettas and escape
plans.
Brendans investigation unearths plenty of his fellow
students secrets, as he finds himself pulled closer to the treacherously ensnaring
reach of the crime syndicate. In short order Brendan will weasel his way into their inner
circle to come face to face with oddball and drug king pin The Pin (Lukas Haas). Along the
way he crosses paths and wills with the syndicates muscle Tugger (Noah Fleiss),
debutante-ish rich girl Laura (Nora Zehetner), drug-addicted Dode (Noah Segan) and a whole
crew of high-school thugs. The frozen-hearted heroes match the psychological complexities
of the bad guys, quirk for quirk, in a way suggestive of A History of Violence. The mountain of
complicated plot twists is garnished with complicated dialog, heavily peppered with
neologisms from this particular underworld. The end effect resembles Pulp
Fiction in more ways than one.
Writer/director Rian Johnsons first feature-length film, Brick
was distinguished at the Sundance Film Festival with a Special Jury Prize for
Originality of Vision. An homage to the hard-boiled noir tradition of 1930s
Hollywood, Brick evokes a sardonic-horrific (teen-aged "cool"),
Hopper-like vision (emotionally empty suburban landscapes) of a post-Godfather
universe (cool, smart, and efficient trumps caring or compassionate). The film takes many
of its verbal cues, tone, plot, and eccentricities from Dashiell Hammett, while borrowing
inventively from Kubricks vision of the disaffected, anarchic, amoral youth of A
Clockwork Orange. Taking another cue from the infamous incident at Columbine High
School, wherein disaffected suburban high-schoolers massacred their classmates, Brick
probes beneath the empty, bland surfaces of the southern California suburban landscape.
Its Thumbsucker-like surface
is pure illusion. Brick also happens to be a nifty visual catalog of scenes and
visions of innumerable other films.
In some ways Brick is too precociously clever for its own good.
It appeals strongly to the Tarantino-trained taste for complexity, self-irony, film quotes
embedded within film quotes, and is intended to require multiple viewings to extract and
savor layer upon layer of richly and complexly flavored brain candy. Beyond all the
cleverness, perhaps the single most satisfying cinematic experience of Brick lies
in witnessing director Johnsons matter-of-fact transformation of the contemporary
American suburban landscape into a moral stage of mythic proportion. The hand-held
camcorder used as a backyard toy achieves a (perhaps not) surprising apotheosis in Rian
Johnsons expert handling.
- Les Wright