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(2004) rt:109m ***½
Director: Zach Braff
Starring: Zach Braff, Ian Holm, Peter Sarsgaard, Natalie Portman
New Jersey takes a lot of flak.
Sure its citizens drive like shit and portions of it stink of the
same, but it certainly has its positive qualities as well. Honestly
this movie could have been set just about anywhere, but the director/writer/Scrubs
star, Zach Braff, happens to be from Jersey, so voila: Garden
State. I honestly expected a little more NJ humor, but am glad
he didn't take and cheap shots or go for the easy laughs at the state's
expense. So, Garden State is a love storyˇalbeit a slightly
odd one. Mixed in with the love story is the undercurrent of family
drama, finding oneself and mental illness. Ah, all the earmarks of
a small, indie film. The gist of the story is that Andrew Largeman
(Braff) grew up in Jersey, left at sixteen for reasons unknown, ends
up in LA as an actor, and then has to return to NJ at twenty-eight
to go to his estranged mother's funeral. Large, as he's known to friends,
hasn't been back home in almost ten years, yet when he comes back
all his high school friends are still are still in the neighborhood
working odd jobs or, in one case, living in a mansion he bought after
making millions inventing silent Velcro. We can see from Large's demeanor
that something is obviously wrong with him, and we learn later that
he's loaded up with anti-depressants and anti-psychotics. Ah, let
the reawakening begin! And who better to shake him out of his stupor
than a cute girl? Enter the seemingly free-wheeling, slightly wacky
Sam (Natalie Portman). So what if she's a little bit of a pathological
liar and an epileptic? She can teach him how to live life on his own
terms! So, we see where this is going, and it does. There are a couple
nice things that Braff does to avoid the cliche that this movie could
so easily become. First, neither of them is dying (well, really dying
anyway). They meet in a doctor's office, and I got so scared right
off the bat that this was going to be one of those Dying Young,
Sweet November, Autumn in New York, Here on
Earth, Six Weeks (I could go one) type movies where
they share the time she has left, learn their life lessons, she dies,
we cry, and his spirit is lifted by some keepsake she leaves him.
Second, the characters go through their arcs, change somewhat, but
don't do the total 180 degree turn to make the pieces fit. Richard
Gere, corporate raider turned hopeless romantic climbing the hooker's
fire escape this is not. Of course the film is not without its first
time writer/director pitfalls, which includes the three main characters
climbing a structure in the rain and all letting out cathartic yells
as they are drenched. Also included is the ever popular group night
swimming scene, a dude shooting flaming arrows into the sky for no
reason (very reminiscent of the aerosol flamethrower scene in St.
Elmo's Fire) and the very overused boarding a plane and having
to make the decision to stay or go scene. But I'm just being nit-picky.
The film is very talky, which isn't necessarily a bad thing (unless
it's Before Sunrise, in which case it makes me want to kill
myself trying to decipher what French-accented Delpy and mumbling
Hawk are trying to say both figuratively and literally) if the characters
have something good to say. I'd call this movie more quirky than funny,
(and sometimes it seems he tries a little too hard with the quirkiness)
but overall the characters are well done, the acting decent, the subject
matter relevant and universal, and the film ultimately satisfying.
Check out the DVD extras if you can and see how this thing could have
really veered horribly into maudlin melodrama. [DVD, MF]
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