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3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Rich kids looking to be famous, 8 October 2002
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Author:
Jon V
Similar to Igby and DAngerous lives of altar boys, this film
covers the milieu of rich, bored, unloved kids who screw
up.
Beautifully shot, well acted especially Devon Gummersall
and
Leslie Bibb.
Good, solid indie film.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Hard and lonely hours, 22 May 2003
Author:
Chris Knipp from Berkeley, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
An outstanding portrayal of the central character and sensitivity toward the
scene and milieu make this film worth watching for those who can put up with
the discomfort and unpleasantness it shows us. "Young Unknowns" is about a
twenty-something at a posh Hollywood Hills house whose father is a
successful ad film director currently off working in his native England.
The son too has aspirations as an ad director, but at the moment is working
harder at being a thoroughly unpleasant person, arrogant and abusive toward
his Spanish girlfriend and nearly everyone else and throwing his weight
around in a flailing, ugly way that quickly reveals his intense insecurity
and loneliness. Overshadowed by his remote dad, Charlie Fox (Devon
Gummersall of "My So-Called Life") compensates by pretending to be important
and by keeping everyone at an emotional distance. He seems to be bursting
with insecure self-importance that is constantly threatening to turn nasty.
The people in his immediate vicinity are equally rootless and unhappy and
seem themselves about to explode or do each other harm.
As the movie opens, Charlie and his older girlfriend, Paloma (Arly Jover)
are getting up at this big, slightly rundown, slightly empty, but still
impressive house and taking a swim and having a drink and a smoke. Nothing
is really happening, but so much the better to reveal Paloma's boredom and
need to medicate herself and Charlie's angry, boastful insecurity. He makes
some intensely vulgar sexual remarks to her, but there is no sex and no
eroticism and no love. Then along comes Charlie's jive-talking friend Joe
(Elon Bailey) with a girl model, Cassandra (Leslie Bibb), and the action,
such as it is, begins. There is enough boredom and alienation here to fill
an Antonioni movie but there is an added meanness and sense of danger that
Antonioni steered clear of. "Young Unknowns" is without real longeurs
because the emotions in it are so explosive and dangerous. Jelski keeps the
aimlessness compelling through the sheer force of Charlie's
bravado.
It soon emerges that Charlie's mother is only one of three of his father's
wives, and she was alcoholic and suicidal and faded from view but not from
his life when he was twelve; she's somewhere in Vermont now. Charlie has
been working on a "spec film" in hopes of becoming the director his father
is, and he already boasts to Paloma that he's a big shot. He curses his
photographer when he views the rushes on video. He curses Paloma. He
curses his mother. He's abusive and hostile to everyone in sight. He
ignores phone calls, but is clearly awaiting one from his father -- the only
person whom he holds in awe.
The events are so desultory that it's hard to say in what order they occur,
but somewhere early on Joe gets physical with Cassandra and breaks her nose,
which requires a trip to the hospital. Later Charlie learns that his mother
is dead and he puts his hand through a door pane and when he and Joe go back
to the hospital they pick up Cassandra, who turns out to be taking pills by
the handful. The boys snort meth. Cassandra has an overdose. Charlie
finally gets the call from England that he's been waiting for and learns
that he must go to Vermont for the funeral alone and can't go over and spend
time with his dad as he'd like. He says goodbye to Paloma, who has seemed
to want to leave him from the first few frames but unable to bring herself
to do so till now. As the movie ends we see Charlie in an airport, alone,
waiting to go to Vermont.
The director collaborated with Wolfgang Bauer to adapt his play "Magic
Afternoon" into this movie. What makes "Young Unknowns" valid and
interesting is the intense, powerful performance of Devon Gummersall, whose
impersonation of Charlie is full of commitment yet seamless. Gummersall
embodies the self-centered, blustery jerk of a guy that is Charlie with a
compelling and mesmerizing command that lacks any hint of theatricality. One
can only conclude that he knows whereof he speaks, that indeed everyone
concerned does. Arly Jover as Paloma is drenched in burnt out sadness.
Elon Bailey as Joe is strange and explosive. Leslie Bibb as Cassandra is a
pathetic non-person. Each of the actors gives a nicely individualized
portrayal. The result is a slice of life: how the kids of celebrities live
and go wrong. It ain't pretty, but it's convincing. "Young Unknowns" opened
the same weekend as "Raising Victor Vargas," and made a nice antidote to the
latter's adorable sweetness and its very different sort of authenticity.
It's too bad few who see Sollett's movie will see Jelski's and compare these
two contrasting worlds, and too bad that the adept acting and direction of
"Young Unknowns" will be lost on people turned off by the unappealing
subject matter. Naivety is not the only thing in this world that can be
"authentic."
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