
...
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
|
||
|
||
Spring Forward is a small, independently made film, without
special effects or gimmickry, that offers an intelligent script and first rate
performances. Like You Can
Count on Me, it is centered with solidly developed characterizations and
the characters have quirky individuality.
Paul (Liev Schreiber) has just been paroled from Danbury where he was
imprisoned for an armed robbery conviction. A sort of contemporary Jean Valjean, Paul
turned to a criminal act under financial pressure and considerable stress; he is genuinely
repentant and seeks, through reading philosophical and inspirational books, to find some
meaning in his life and to get "back on track."
The film begins as Paul starts a new job with the parks department of a
small New England town. He's paired with Murph (Ned Beatty), a veteran employee near
retirement. Murph seems as grounded and secure as Paul is confused and defensive. Over
seven episodes spanning a year, the two work together, talk together, and learn from each
other. The episodes are bridged with beautifully caught scenes of seasonal New England
landscapes and activities like trick-or-treating and stringing Christmas lights.
The differences in the ways these two men react and respond are
illustrated through their dialogue as they experience a series of incidents and meet a
variety of people--from a homeless man found living in the park to a self-important young
local businessman to a woman in the midst of a nervous breakdown. Murph has a gay son who
was ejected as a scout leader and is dying of AIDS. As he and Paul work together and talk,
they develop a trusting relationship, able to share the intimacies of their feelings,
bridging the age and experience gap between them.
Beatty, well known from countless television roles, captures in his
performance the regular-guy family man, steady and wise with good common sense, but
fearing emptiness in his forthcoming retirement after working his whole life and
emotionally pained that he could not save his son from the bigotry of others. When Paul
spouts a lot of high-toned philosophy from his reading, Murph listens and translates the
point back to the simply stated idea that Paul is struggling to express. Schreiber (A Walk on the Moon,
Hamlet) seems to
grow with each successive film performance. Over the course of Spring Forward he
subtly shows Paul's transition from fearful insecurity, growing into confidence and
understanding.
Tom Gilroy trusted his own strong script for Spring Forward
and served himself well as director, keeping the focus on his well-realized characters. He
might well have omitted the somewhat hackneyed scene of the two men sharing a joint and
falling into inarticulate giggling, but he almost salvages it when they fall silent and
the camera draws back to show the beauty of the autumn colors in the park landscape.