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Elephant
(2003)
Starring:
Alex Frost, John Robinson, Elias McConnell
Director:
Gus Van Sant
Rating: R
Studio:
Fine Line Features
Release Date:
10.24.03
Review
Posted: 03.05.04
Spoilers:
Minor
By
Howard Schumann
On April 20, 1999,
two boys wearing trench coats carried a daunting arsenal of weapons
harnessed with military web gear into Columbine High School in
Littleton, Colorado, and systematically gunned down thirteen students.
Gruesome though it was, the incident was just one of eight fatal high
school shootings between 1997 and 1999. These traumatizing events
began a debate about what was wrong with the nation's youth, an issue
that is the subject of Gus Van Sant's Elephant.
Winner of the Golden Palm at the 2003
Cannes Film Festival, Elephant is a brilliant and deeply affecting
film that makes a courageous attempt to grasp the malaise of today's
youth culture. Van Sant does not attempt to explain Columbine or
uncover its underlying causes, and there is no revealing epiphany. His
film is a highly stylized, dreamlike tone poem that defies linear
conventions and is almost surreal in its approach. Using flashbacks
and recurring images from different points of view, the film captures
the mood and tone of its adolescent world: its perceptions, its
self-absorption, and ultimately its darkest instincts.
The camera is a detached observer, and
the strength of the film lies in its acute power of observation and
detail. Van Sant shows us all the surface rituals: the girl
cheerleaders, the boys playing football, the locker-lined hallways,
the academic discussions, yet an ineffable feeling of loneliness
pervades. The picture features impeccable acting by a group of
non-professionals from the Portland, Oregon area. Each character is
introduced separately and we see them going about their business on a
seemingly ordinary school day. The steadicam-tracking camera follows
them as they walk through the sterile halls that seem endless. The
school appears without life -- a place where one feels a desperate
sense of loss.
We see John (John Robinson), a
blonde-haired surfer type, take over the driving from his father who
has had too much to drink, then get called to task by an administrator
for being late for school. Eli (Elias McConnell) is a photographer who
asks classmates, including John, to pose for pictures. Football player
Jordan (Jordan Taylor) meets his girlfriend Carrie (Carrie Finklea)
for lunch. Three friends Nicole (Nicole George), Brittany (Brittany
Mountain), and Acadia (Alicia Miles) gossip and argue about who is
whose best friend. Michelle (Kristen Hicks) refuses to wear shorts, is
admonished by her teacher, and then goes to work in the library. The
paths of these students crisscross throughout the film and each has
their own destiny to fulfill when the violence erupts.
The main protagonists, Alex (Alex
Frost) and Eric (Eric Deulen) are modeled after Eric Harris and Dylan
Klebold of Columbine. When we first meet Alex, he is being shunned by
his fellow students, called names and pelted with spitballs in science
class. Alex is more outgoing and creative, Eric more passive, but
their personalities complement each other. Alex and Eric wait at home
until a strange package arrives in the mail while Alex plays
Beethoven's "Fur Elise" on the piano. When they return to school, they
are dressed in combat gear and ready to kill.
Rather than giving us pat answers, Van Sant bases his approach on the
elusiveness of truth, and our insatiable desire to know more. The
imagery and camerawork are almost painfully beautiful, while the
disconnected narrative deliberately withholds closure. On top of all
this, the pacing is superb, slowly building up the almost unbearable
tension. When it is finally released, the explosion hits you with a
frightening energy that is as unforgettable as it is chilling.
Film
Grade: A
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