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The Way Way Back Reviewed by Damien Straker on August 1st, 2013 StudioCanal presents a film directed by Nat Faxon and Jim Rash Screenplay by Nat Faxon and Jim Rash Starring: Liam James, Toni Collette, Steve Carell, Allison Janney, AnnaSpohia Robb, Sam Rockwell and Maya Rudolph Running Time: 103 minutes Rating: M Released: August 1st, 2013 |
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You
can still put a price on a great script in
Hollywood. The Way Way Back was
shown at
the Sundance Film Festival and then the distribution rights were
auctioned off
to Fox Searchlight for a little under $10 million dollars. The bidding
was
described by the Los Angeles Times as: "In what could be one of the
richest deals in Sundance Film Festival history". This proves two
things.
Fox were rightly confident in the film's quality, it's an excellent
movie, and
that studios are willing to pay big dollars for films with great
scripts because
of how rare they are today.
The
strength of the script is that it realises that there is something to
be lost
if Duncan were not to blossom while he is still young. He is surrounded
by
adult characters that are complacent, jealous and disappointed with
their lives.
Several of the characters in the film are also divorcees and brush with
infidelity too, which heightens the film's awareness of people becoming
desperate in unhappy situations. The film achieves a dual layering. It
is a
coming of age story but it never over or underplays its sadder
impression of an
incompatible family unit and how people make wrong choices when their
lives
appear to be in stasis. The film's opening image is a static medium
close-up of
Duncan sitting alone in the car, which underscores his immobility and
lack of
self-belief.
Countering
its somewhat bleaker subtext, the film is written with great flair and
some
hilariously funny dialogue. I particularly liked the line where Betty
says that
her gay ex-husband's favourite view of her was the back of her head.
Together,
Faxon and Rash have also done a terrific job in providing each
character with a
unique voice. This is due to how well-chosen the actors are and how
convincingly they inhabit their characters. Liam James is astonishingly
good at
expressing Duncan's feelings through his slumped and disengaged body
language
and monotone voice. This is until he takes responsibility for his own
life and
grows more confident in his skin and finds a gentle bond of commonality
with
the beautiful Susanna. On either side of him are two men with contrasting acting styles and dialogue rhythms. Steve Carell is uncharacteristically serious and rigid as Trent, who is overly harsh in singling out Duncan, but we understand that he wants to instill rules into him. He's just stubborn and terrible at empathising with other people. Sam Rockwell as the slacker Owen snatches the movie with one of the funniest, most energised, manic performances I've seen all year. His jokes and sarcasm are fast and loose and earned the biggest laughs at the screening. Significantly, he adds the right dosage of kindness to his character, without becoming overly sentimental either. Toni Collette has a comparatively small role, but it's an expressive, pivotal one that requires her clearly uncomfortable character to make a serious choice about her own unhappy life.
This
hilarious, warm and surprisingly touching film is proof that there is
still
value in small, human comedy-dramas and that they don't necessarily
have to
break the bank. It's heartening to see a script of this quality can
still be
produced and supported by Hollywood heavyweights. Yet there's also a
somber
melancholy that this retreat away is ready to end and we'll be
returning to our
ordinary cinema lives of robots, ninjas and superheroes. If only the
vacation
could last a little longer. |