Finding
Forrester Movie Review:
Finding
Forrester is a great film about self-discovery and the human
spirit. The film focuses on two opposite people that come
together by their love for writing. Jamal (Brown) is a sixteen-year-old
black basketball player that has just got accepted into
a prep school. Jamal loves to write and he reads constantly
to enhance his knowledge. William (Connery) is an old man
in his late sixties from Scotland that is a Pulitzer Prize
winning author. William stays conformed in his apartment
building and never steps outside. The two meet through witty
circumstances and William decides to help Jamal with his
writing, only if he never asks William about his personal
life. The days turn into weeks as the two argue, agree and
converge on different writings. The two then continue to
embark on an unlikable relationship of opposites and finding
each one’s place.
I
really loved Finding Forrester, I thought it was touching,
funny and most of all inspiring. It had the same feeling
of past films like Dead Poets Society and Mr. Holland’s
Opus.
Mike
Rich’s script for the film could have been varied and typical,
but its not. Rich creates believable characters and situations
for them to fall into. I found the characters to reflect
commonness, but not one-dimensional or stereotypical. The
structure of the relationship between William and Jamal
paces the film steadily. However, in my opinion, Jamal is
the main character of this film. The reason is because he
has situations with every character revealed in the story.
William is right behind Jamal, in which he doesn’t have
many other characters to encounter because seclusion is
one of his character traits. Rich’s script is sharp; the
writer doesn’t let cliché things that are touched on run
the film. Examples are racism, interracial relationships,
Jamal’s basketball pressure, William’s drinking, or neighborhood
violence. The writer develops a full-of-life drama that
is a defiant crowd pleaser.
Director
Gus Van Sant conquerors another “older-guy and younger guy”
relationship film (previously directed Good Will Hunting).
Van Sant poises his actors in a confine setting, William’s
apartment, which I believe served as the writing retreat.
The director doesn’t develop striking angles or panning
shots in his films. He is more of a conservative director
that captures the drama of the film and lets the story tell
itself. Van Sant does counter and place his actors in shots
to where their lines and dialogue shoot quickly back and
forth. One example is the novelist argument between Jamal
and his egotistical professor, Robert Crawford (Abraham).
Sean
Connery delivers one of the best performances of his career
as the secluded writer William Forrester. The talented actor
steals so many moments with his character quirks and self-inflated
body language. He is an icon, a talent, and once again Connery
proves that he is one of the best. Newcomer Robert Brown
stands strong and holds his own as the ambitious Jamal.
Brown has very good eyes and a curiosity about him that
I believe will lead him into a fine career. F. Murray Abraham
once again effectively plays a slimy individual as Jamal’s
biased English teacher. Anna Paquin also delivers a well-balanced
performance as Jamal’s sweet love interest, Claire. Rapper
Busta Rhymes delivers a break through performance as Jamal’s
loving brother Terrell. Rhymes was very impressive with
his acting in Finding Forrester, I hope he continues on
with his acting career.
Like
I said before, I just loved this film. I was absolutely
absorbed in it. There are no extraordinary aspects in this
film, it is just one of those great little movies that wonderfully
stands tall.
Report
Card Grade: A
Joseph
C. Tucker
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