Archive for Friday, February 22, 2008
‘Be Kind Rewind’
THROUGHOUT
Gondry, champion of all that is lo-fi, DIY and crafty, and fearless defender of the mechanical over the digital, has made a movie about a couple of guys who accidentally demagnetize an entire video store’s inventory and decide to restore the videos by shooting lo-fi, DIY and crafty versions of their own. Video store, you say? That’s right. VHS tapes? Yes. And the story’s not set in the past, either, despite its characters’ seemingly quenchless thirst for the blockbusters of the 1980s.
This technical anachronism is addressed by setting up the Passaic, N.J., store’s owner, Mr. Fletcher (
A loopy and likable
Old Mrs. Falewicz may be too fuzzy to tell the difference between the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man and a little pile of flambéed S’mores, but her nephew and his friends aren’t. Soon, the neighborhood is clamoring for Mike and Jerry’s “Sweded” remakes. (The two pretend the movies are being ordered from Sweden to justify the delay and expense of renting them.) They recruit a pretty local girl named Alma (Melonie Diaz) from the dry cleaner to be their costar and crew, and when they reach their production capacity, they invite people from the neighborhood to help produce and star in their favorites.
If this sounds like an interesting comment on the intersection between postmodern artistic appropriation and copyright infringement, it’s not, exactly. It’s more like the setup to a comment that never quite gets made. Aside from coming up with ways to build props and replicate special effects using nothing but junkyard finds and ingenuity, the friends turn out not to have all that much to say about the movies they’re remaking. Sure, Mrs. Falewicz fixation on “Driving Miss Daisy” drives Mike crazy, but rather than turn the movie on its ear, he just sulks and storms off the set. When they like a movie, they approach it like lovelorn fan-boys, not Po-mo warriors. Given the chance to subvert the paradigm, they mostly just shorten the running time.
The movie-making montage sequences are the film’s most delightfully inventive scenes, as when Mike and Jerry shoot day-for-night by switching the camera to “negative,” then wear negative photocopies of their faces as masks to reverse the image once again. But the sense of fun that animates the movie doesn’t quite make up for the fact that it just doesn’t have the swoony, emotional pull of Gondry’s “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” or even his more recent “The Science of Sleep.” You get the feeling that without a more romantic collaborator, or at the very least a love story to torture himself with, Gondry forgets all about relationships and would happily lock himself in the workshop to tinker with his gadgets forever.
That’s not to suggest that his gadgets aren’t great or that the plucky energy of “Be Kind Rewind” isn’t eminently likable. And there’s something about Gondry’s persistent nostalgia that feels contemporary, or opportune, at least. The director seems to be talking back to the monoculture without acknowledging that he’s doing it, raising a cheerful fist in defense of the little guy, the artist, the individual voice. Meanwhile, though, the monoculture is busy assimilating the little guy as fast as it can, so Gondry’s message gets scrambled. Mike and Jerry are charging top dollar for their remakes, after all, so when
“Be Kind Rewind.” MPAA rating: PG-13 for some sexual references. Running time: 1 hour, 41 minutes. In general release.
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