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It's
amazing some of the films that are uncovered after actors
become stars. I'm not just talking sex tapes and dirty little
secrets. There's some legitimate curiosities out there waiting
to be unearthed.
Case
in point, Ron Teachworth's 1984 drama Going Back. It's
a small independent production that likely wouldn't garner
much attention now except for the fact that it stars a young
Bruce Campbell.
The
film takes place in the exact moment of limbo between childhood
and adulthood, the summer after high school but before college.
It's a Western right of passage. Brice (Campbell) and Cleveland
(Christopher Howe) go on a walkabout of sorts, leaving behind
generic suburbia for a journey through the quiet countryside.
Brice falls in love with a quiet farm girl named Cindy (Susan
W. Yamaskai) while Cleveland finds the father figure that's
been missing from his life since he was a child. His name
is Jack (Perry Mallette), an aging farmer who lets the boys
bunk at his farmstead.
The
two weeks the boys spend in the countryside answer a lot of
the important life questions the pair have and open up a world
of even more possibilities. About two-thirds of the way through
the film, it skips ahead four years. Cleveland and Brice have
drifted apart and grown much facial hair. They meet up and
decide to head back to the country to see how things have
changed - or rather dream of the way things were. But things
can't stay perfect forever. Time goes by. People move on.
The present fades into memories.
Set
in the easy-going backdrop of rural America, Going Back
is laid back and simple, everything the "traditional
Bruce Campbell" film is not. Its greatest strength is
that its heart is out there and on the line. Much of the film
revolves around gentle banter. There are some heavy conversations
when nothing is left to the imagination but there's still
a gentle simplicity and honesty to it that makes it work.
For example, there's one scene where Brice and Cleveland are
out for a walk and Cleveland lays out his heart about losing
his father. All the dots are connected to the point where
he says exactly how he feels and the issues it has caused
in the years since. Generally I'm not a fan of such exposition,
but there are several small details that make this scene,
and others like it, feel genuine rather than forced and awkward.
Going
Back is a simple joy. Although its attention might come
from a star who has gone on to do big things in the two decades
since, it's nonetheless deserving. Filled with solid performances,
gorgeous cinematography and realistic dialogue, it captures
the same sad feeling of nostalgia watching it that the film's
characters experience.
Buy
the DVD.
©Movie
Views; November 12, 2006
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