by Larry Richman
March 14, 2008 6:33 PM
Readers of this blog know of my fondness for
All the Boys Love Mandy Lane, one of the Top Picks of my past two years of festival-going. Director Jonathan Levine's followup feature,
The Wackness, recently premiered at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival and was immediately acquired by Sony Pictures Classics. I wasn't able to catch it at the time. Fortunately,
The Wackness was presented in a special midnight screening not on the official SXSW Film Festival schedule. It was a special treat and quite an unexpected surprise.
The Wackness is basically a two-man show, with Ben Kingsley and Josh Peck as psychiatrist Dr. Squires and his patient Luke Shapiro. The twist? One deals drugs and the other takes them. But guess who buys and who sells? And did I mention that Luke not only doles out weed to his doctor but also dates his daughter? Ahh yes...the plot thickens. Yet Squires and Shapiro forge an unlikely friendship not unlike two college buddies -- the boy is just a bit too mature for his age and the man a bit too immature, and they meet at about the same intellectual level.
Penned by director Levine, it's a complex storyline but
The Wackness is ultimately a character-driven piece. Kingsley's performance is a tour de farce in a daring and risky role unlike anything we've seen -- this ain't your father's Gandhi. Josh Peck, best known as television's Josh of
Josh & Drake and to indie lovers as George, the tormented victim in
Mean Creek, is the biggest surprise here. He carries this film on his shoulders like a veteran. Olivia Thirlby (
Snow Angels, Juno) is delightful as the object of Luke's affection.
Production values belie the film's modest budget, especially given the cost of a location period piece --
The Wackness is set in New York City 1994. Music of the era naturally provides the backdrop for the duo's drug-dealing days and party nights. Drugs (selling and taking) seem to be ubiquitous in the films I've seen here at SXSW and
The Wackness' overindulgence can be hard to watch at times. But what could have strayed into a silly variation on
Dazed & Confused (or the recent
Charlie Bartlett) is, instead, a touching coming-of-age story as relevant today as ever. The fact that the film remains grounded in semi-reality is a tribute to the talents of Kingsley and Peck in the hands of director Jonathan Levine. This director is a force to be reckoned with now that he has
All the Boys Love Mandy Lane and
The Wackness under his belt.