Showing posts with label Sundance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sundance. Show all posts

Sunday, February 24, 2013

The Glamor of Being in the Psychiatric Unit


Stephen Chbosky's The Perks of Being a Wallflower is one of those movies that gets under your skin without really working too hard.  It does a sort of slow, sad, hallway walk into your soul.  Based on his novel from a decade or so ago, the movie lovingly cannibalizes John-Hughes movies for its textures and rhythms, and somehow deepens those moments through a misty-eyed adherence to the importance of nostalgia.  It makes being in a psyche unit feel like going to Sundance and having hot chocolate with a bunch of other sad kid actors.  Glamorizing sadness and depression is an old movie staple, but Chbosky gets it so right you feel a sort of gorgeous depression slowly seep into your consciousness as you watch the movie.  There's something about lead actor Logan Lerman's wide-open but still a little closed-up face that allows us to feel that self-involvement is an artform, and Emma Watson and the ecstatic Ezra Miller playing Lerman's Island-of-Lost-Toys sidekicks gives the movie's atmosphere a stylish, kinky kick.  Whoever lit this movie must know how to write extremely effective love-letters, because the lighting in every scene has an unbearable lightness of being to it; you feel yourself aching to ache in those suburban houses these kids live in, and in the penultimate scene, the three of them riding through a tunnel blasting David Bowie's "Heroes," you truly want to become a part of their miserable little clique.  Perks is a masterpiece of sad-sack outsiderness, celebrating those feelings you often just have to shrug off in order to get things done.  This movie wallows in beautiful self-pity, and that somehow is its genius.