Showing posts with label rotten youth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rotten youth. Show all posts

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Andrew Neel's & Mike Roberts' KING KELLY -- shot on phone camera -- hits NYC & VOD

Narcissism unbound! If you've ever wondered just where the current trend toward "me-to-the-infinite-power" might lead us, look no farther than the bracing new film from Andrew Neel (shown below, of Darkon and Alice Neel, among other movies), KING KELLY, about a high school student and her various friends -- and fans. Fans? Yes: She's the number-one attraction on an internet porn site and is about to have her very own site make its debut.

Shot completely on phone-camera (several of them), the movie is about as low-budget/
down-and-dirty as you can technically get, and yet, compared to a number of multi-million-dollar mainstream movies currently playing theaters or on DVD, it's got twice the life and maybe ten times the pizzazz. TrustMovies admits that when he heard this film was shot on phone-camera, the idea didn't thrill him. But the genuinely clever tale that the filmmaker spins (his co-writer is Mike Roberts), the first-class performances he draws from his fine cast, together with his more-than-adept use of editing and sound turn the experience into something of a triumph on every level.

Why "King" Kelly, rather than "Queen"? Is this some high-school nod to feminism? Doubtful, as our leading lady (played with the kind of utter, self-absorbed conviction by Louisa Krause, above, that is by turns shocking and finally hilarious) is simply a character too overall dumb to have considered anything so far outside her immediate needs.

How she treats her family, above, and her best friend, Jordan, (a fine, subdued and finally drugged-out Libby Woodbridge below), is no better than she's treated her boyfriends, current or ex. If those around her also seem unduly selfish, she's the Queen Bee of conceited egomaniacs -- and a wonder to behold.

The plot, once kicked in motion after a very few minutes, rampages onwards like the crazed characters who are creating it. Pretty soon we're up to our ears in everything from porn sites to drug trafficking, car wrecks, state troopers and some heavy-duty sex and violence -- the latter served up so speedily and surprisingly that we're tempted to laugh at it, too.

Underneath it all, but never explicitly stated, is a call to alarm about -- oh, god, don't say it -- the younger generation, social media and personal responsibility -- and how all this has simply spun out of the control of the supposed guardians of today's youth. We parents and/or grandparents need to be as proficient technically as are the kids; instead, we're losing ground and losing touch.

Meanwhile, enjoy this trash-fest, which one character likens to Jerry Springer (but it's way more radical than that). With mini-budget and maxi-smarts, Mr. Neel outdoes even the rare, mainstream attempt at anarchy like the generally delightful Project X. He's used his smart phone as a mirror on youth and in the process has entertained, alarmed and informed us rather spectacularly.

King Kelly arrived theatrically yesterday in New York City at the Cinema Village, and will make its VOD debut this coming Tuesday, December 4.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Joel Schumacher's TWELVE should burnish the filmmaker's reputation -- for sleaze


Three years ago, very nearly to the week, critic Nathan Lee used an NY Times Op-Ed article to excuse his spoiling movies for his readers.  In it, he is on record as saying he wouldn't dare unmask the secrets in David Cronenberg's A History of Violence but that he wouldn't think of extending this same courtesy to Joel Schumacher for his The Number 23.  At the time I was prepared to give Mr. Lee that year's "Pompous Little Twit" award for his ridiculous opinion.  I am not a particular fan of A History of Violence and even less of The Number 23.  But, I am sorry: Because you do not care for the work of a certain director does not give you the right to destroy his movie for those who have not seen it.

I bring all this up now because, after viewing the new high-end, schlock-fest TWELVE, directed by Mr. Schumancher (shown at left),  I am almost tempted -- but still cannot -- go along with Lee.  Twelve wants to be an east-coast Less Than Zero but has none of that film's better moments or possessions, starting  with an actor as riveting as was (and continues to be) Robert Downey Jr.

Instead we have an actor named Chace Crawford (shown above: and, sorry, Gossip Girls and Boys, this is the full extent of Chace's naked body that Twelve allows you to view).  Mr Crawford is pretty, all right, but he is neither given an opportunity in the script (by Jordan Melamed, from the novel by Nick McDonell) nor does he do anything on his own to create a character possessing some depth.

But then none of the cast does, though Crawford inhabits a one-
note world all his own.  His facial stubble never changes, nor do his expressions and reactions. Everyone here seems to have been recruited for his or her "look," and they do look good -- from Esti Ginzberg (above, left) and Emily Mead (below, with bears, in one of the film's only original scenes) as the hot girls at school to Rory Culkin (shown at bottom, with Ms. Ginzberg) and Billy Magnusson as exceedingly wealthy and even more troubled brothers.

Most of the characters here are wealthy (with the exception of Crawford's -- and his goody two-shoes gal-pal played by Emma Roberts, shown below).  They seem to be working-class (Chace plays a drug dealer, but, hey, that's work!) and so must be better than the filthy-rich, sleazebag kids with whom they go to school. Now, I am no fan of wealth or the people who parade it around, but when a movie piles it on this thickly, it leaves me nearly ready to vote for John McCain.

This is a particularly lazy film, as well.  A "knowing" narration kicks in at the beginning, offering oodles of non-stop exposition about all the characters on view (this frees the performers from having to create their own characters, I guess). This narration never stops, horning in time and again on the narrative (there isn't much of one, actually).  Voiced in low-key fashion by Keifer Sutherland (so what?), it drones on about nonsense such as this: "White Mike (that's Crawford) would love to jump from rooftop to rooftop, but he knows he never will."  Huh?

Early on, when one noticeably unstable character purchases what looks like a Samurai sword from a blue-lit shop in... Chinatown?, mature viewers will be put in mind of Chekov's gun theory. Sure enough: if we see it in the first act, it's gonna be used later on. The movie is awash in constant cliché.  Surely an actor like Curtis Jackson (aka "50 Cent") could play something other than a dirty drug dealer? Or maybe not. And, surprise: everyone here seems to have major "mother" issues (except one rich young man who has a major father issue). The mothers on view, including Ellen Barkin (at left), Alexandra Neil and Alice Barrett, are either dead or ought to be.)

I could go on -- god knows, the movie does -- but why?  I'd only bore you silly and put myself to sleep.  Twelve, from the storied French film company Gaumont (stick to your home turf, please, if you can't give us anything better than this), Hannover House and Radar Pictures, opens Friday, August 6, all over the place. In NYC, you can find it at the AMC Empire 25, the U.A. 64th and 2nd, and the Cinema Village.

On various web sites, from that of  Hannover House to the IMDB, the movie is stated to be just under 2 hours in length, but the screener print the press saw earlier this week runs around 95 minutes. We should be grateful for small favors.