Whatever
Movie Review:
Whatever
is one in a long list of films about teenagers in their
supposedly natural habitat. When they say "natural
habitat", they really mean that the director wallowed
in depravity and despair - Good Heavens if they ever decided
to make a film about decent adolescents who don't drink
and screw around, or fornicate with pastry and other non-living
things. Whatever was not made by one who decided to buck
the trend.
It is, however, compelling to watch because of its raw imagery,
up to a point. The two main characters are Anna and Brenda.
Anna is an artist who hopes to be accepted into a New York
art school, while Brenda is a promiscuous drunk who gets
herself into too much trouble (she is gang-raped in the
very first shot!). For much of the movie, we are shown the
sublte differences between these two friends. Brenda is
more likely to take a walk on the wild side, as she gets
herself into debased sexual situations, and, also, meets
up with a couple of drug dealers, just released from prision,
during a party, and has numerous wild nights with them,
while experiementing with drugs such as cocaine. Anna, on
the other hand, appears to be beyond much of the crap Brenda
allows herself to experience. She seems to hang around with
Brenda as a protector; someone who watches over her, however
futilely.
She also has clearly much more potential, as a number of
authority figures in her school point out, including her
English teacher (in a ridiculous characterization), who
constantly treats her with disdain. The flipside of the
sardonic English teacher is the art teacher, who attempts
to inspire confidence in Anna, mainly because he himself
resents his own lack of acheivements, and doesn't want Anna
to give up so easily. We don't get much insight into Anna's
art; we know that she does still life pictures, but that's
all. However, there is a good moment where the art teacher
tells her to be passionate about her art, even if the subject
is merely a pair of boots.
Anna
is clearly at a crossroads; she has the potential to go
far in life, but she is also stuck in a social circle which
values boredom and heavy intoxication. The rest of the movie
details her downfall, and then her potential redemption.
Like
I said, the movie is compelling because it is raw, but only
up to a point. It is painfully clear that the director (Susan
Skoog) made this movie in order to shock. I knew right from
the start, when Brenda is gang-raped, that the rest of the
film would not tone down the material. The film is vulgar,
sexually frank, and wallows in the depressing and pointlessness
that is standard adolencense. The film does feel real, even
though it is also sensationalistic, and is certainly something
that concerned parents may want to take a look at, if they
want to see what their kids may be getting into, although
it must also be said that you shouldn't take a mere movie
too much to heart.
After
a while, however, it just gets a bit disgusting, and by
doing so, potentially hurting any feelings we may have for
the character of Anna. She is not perfect, by any means,
and screws up concerning her homework and art, but her actions
seem fairly credible, up until she and Brenda fake sick
and take a trip to New York. Actually, that's not the unbelievable
part; it's what happens later, when they somehow pick up
two guys from the street, get drunk with them, then go to
a hotel room, where Brenda has sex with one guy in one room,
while Anna gives the other guy a blow job, causing her to
vomit over him. Later on, Anna actually goes on a road trip
with Brenda and the ex-cons to Flordia, and gets into the
drugs and alcohol, before waking up naked on the beach.
I found all of this to be problematic - it does turn your
feelings toward Anna around, because she no longer seems
as if she has her head screwed on reasonably striaght. Of
course, that may be the point; she has to suffer a lot before
she sees the light. But this is the kind of movie where,
at first glance, you feel the director pushes things too
far.
To
be fair, however, I'm more confused than anything, because
on the one hand I wonder if it was neccessary for them to
go as far as they did, and on the other hand, the fact that
the film does do this shows that the director had a lot
of nerve. A real plus is that it is directed and seen from
a female point of view; the young women are the focal point
of the drama, and are not secondary characters. Somehow,
as well, I find it much easier to sympathize with confused
teenage girls than with stupid teenage boys, so, even while
I wonder if everything in this story needed to be told,
it was much easier to take with these two protagonists.
I
wish that the ending was a bit different, though. Anna's
a potential artist; how about transforming her life experiences
into art? I also thought she seemed too bright to find herself
in that hotel room, or on that road trip. Maybe if she had
to be at either of those two places, there could have been
some actual diolouge between these two friends about the
kind of lives that they are truly leading. I don't even
recall anything in the dialouge that suggested that these
kids ever questioned anything that occured; certainly, not
a single mention is made of the gang rape, which is probably
more disturbing than the actual event. Do these people think
it is normal; that it is healthy?? Shouldn't there be some
sort of consequence? I think much of the reason I had a
problem with this film is because there is no moral ground;
Skoog is able to depict the lifestyle, and is at ease at
showing us the ugly depths, but is unable to tell us what
she stands for. Does she really have a problem with this
lifestyle, or does she just tack on an incomplete ending
to appease more moderate folk, just like Russ Meyer tacked
on social relevancy so he wouldn't be accused of making
pornography? The movie gets a recommendation from me; I
just wished that there was more to recommend.
David
Macdonald
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