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It
doesn't take big events like a bank robbery, a massive earthquake
or aliens landing on Earth to make a person grow. For most,
it's the small things in life that do the trick: that first
kiss that ends in disaster, a baseball through Mr. Smith's
stain-glass window, the ceremonial flushing of a pet goldfish
who ate one flake of fish food too many. But too often we
go to the movies for the big bangs and excitement. It makes
for a great two-hour escape from reality. But it's also refreshing
to occasionally confront life on the screen. So goes David
Gordon Green's George Washinton, a quaint and heart
wrenching film about a small group of children on the verge
of adolescence growing up in a poverty-stricken part of North
Carolina.
George
Washington opens with the after church breakup of Buddy
(Curtis Cotton III) and Nasia (Candace Evanofski), a pair
just getting ready for the turmoil of junior high. Yet their
breakup goes more along the lines of old-fashioned adult melodrama.
Buddy
asks, "Can I kiss you one last time?" He goes on
to declare his love for Nasia and implies they had a special
bond. The last time I was that age, I was just starting to
realize the whole guy-girl attraction thing. Love, well that
was reserved for hyperbole purposes only: hot, buttered popcorn,
riding my bike down a big hill without the brakes, staying
up until the wee hours of the morning watching wrestling -
simple stuff like that. Of course, you're not supposed to
take the breakup at face value. Adolescence is supposed to
be about the simple things in life, yet Green takes the opportunity
to eloquently show that these children live complex lives.
And it's not by choice.
Everything
surrounding the kids is broken. Their homes are run down.
Their daytime haunts are abandoned lots and parks strewn with
everything from garbage to gutted cars. Inside an old stage
a small tree has popped up through the old floor. The only
place that seems to be in good shape is the local pool where
all of the town's kids gather during the summer. But even
with the surrounding destruction, the children seem to share
a common optimism.
Nasia
is the film's narrator, occasionally chiming in with her own
personal commentary. She's got a thing for George (Donald
Holden), a bit of an outsider amongst his group. George has
a soft head that keeps him out of the water. He's often shown
wearing a football helmet to further protect himself. Nasia
sees a great future for George. She seems him as a future
president. With the atrocious shape the town is in, the material
world can only get better.
The
one thing that does appear to be strong is the bond of friendship.
Everyday the same group gets together to do much of nothing
because there's nothing better to do. Still, they enjoy just
hanging out and exploring the same old spots. So when a tragedy
hits, the group's world is sent into disarray.
One
of the big differences between a child and an adult is responsibility.
Grown ups have lots, while a kid might have a pet turtle or
a paper route to worry about. But the tragedy that befalls
George, Nasia and the rest of the group forces them to take
responsibility, or at least feel it. It's the same coming-of-age
tale that you often see with bikes, baseball and first kisses,
only bikes and baseball are trivial in George Washington.
We don't live in a simple world and Green has captured the
fact that you don't come of age by hitting a home run or by
building a soap box racer with dad. You come of age when you
take responsibility for what you do.
George
Washington, Green's debut film, is filled with striking
imagery. It has the feeling of a breathing issue of National
Geographic as told threw the words of George Steinbeck and
through the brush of Norman Rockwell. Cinematographer Tim
Orr, who re-teamed with Green for All
the Real Girls and also worked on Raising
Victor Vargas, emphasizes the importance of location
within the film. The plotting might seem slow at first, but
when there's such sweet lines as, "My mom's so nice she'll
knit you a sweater when you first shiver," Green keeps
your attention on the simple things within the film.
It
may seem like hyperbole, but George Washington is a
remarkable film. With just two films under his belt now, Green
is fast becoming something of a prodigy in the industry. His
films might never make a lot of money, but as long as he keeps
his work beautiful and captures the poetic truths behind everyday
life in the world he knows, Green will continue to develop
a core of support for his work.
©Movie
Views; August 8, 2003
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