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Sundance 2010: Spencer Susser's Hesher

Posted by Eric Lavallee on Jan 22, 2010
Source: IONCINEMA.com Festival Coverage

A downright delicious, dark film that is equal parts comedy and drama, this throws a molotov cocktail to your standard film that deals with sorrow and grief -- at first I was thinking that Spencer Susser's Hesher was set to describe the bully rapport between victimizer and victim, but it plunges its set of characters on this uneasy course of mayhem and destabilization....

Spencer Susser's Hesher

....despite the language, the well appreciated foul joke thrown in for good measure (what is green and slimy and smells like bacon...?) the crowd on hand for the world preem at the Eccles reacted especially well to the film - I'm thinking that'll take a distributor with more than one testicle to make an offer on it - and you'd think that a film starring (500) Days' Gordon-Levitt and features Nathalie Portman (she didn't make the preem - she is in New York shooting Darren Aronofsky's latest) would be an easy sell but its actually far from that ....

Spencer Susser's Hesher

....My thinking is that there is a very thin connection to Little Miss Sunshine's mantra of family coming together - here the reunion isn't the focal point, but an almost afterthought - and instead of a yellow VW we have the main character's obsessive nature towards an accidented flaming red family car. As much as Hesher is a showcase for a different kind of Gordon-Levitt, this is actor Devin Brochu's spotlight - who a couple of months back I had originally mistaken him for Max from Spike Jonze's Where the Wild Things Are. With both Brochu and Gordon-Levitt as his canvas, Susser examines separation anxiety in some doses - it both fails and succeeds sometimes not providing enough depth to the child's sense of bewilderment or loss - perhaps that is due to the many bullying events in his life. Here are the two main players plus Susser's brother, Morgan the cinematographer of the film. Full review coming post-festival.



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Review: The Kid With a Bike

Review: The Kid With a Bike

"Despite the one-dimensionality of its anti-patriarchal theme (appeasing the knee-jerk expectations of European film fest audiences), the Dardennes avoid cheapening the story with ideological smugness, achieving an emotional resonance without easy sentimentality."


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Review: Wrong

"Encoded in the outlandish humor that pervades the film are bits of commentary on everyday life. The most overt is Dupieux's urging to appreciate the relationships around you, which is manifested in the dog kidnapping, but also in a subplot in which a woman from the pizzeria moves between men without even realizing they have changed. Another cultural critique is found in the rainy office, an instantly recognizable visual metaphor for how dreary a 9 to 5 job can be."


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