Review Date:
Director: Zach Braff
Writer: Zach Braff
Producers: Pamela Abdy, Gary Gilbert, Dan Halsted
Actors:
Zach Braff as Andrew Largeman Natalie Portman as Sam Peter Sarsgaard as Mark |
I’m not sure if he was really baked, but that glazed look in his eyes worked. Small cameos by others including a funny sequence featuring Ron Leibman as a doctor looking into Braff’s condition, were also entertaining (the dude dressed up as the Medieval knight was also a gas) The film also features a number of memorable sequences, one in which the gang enjoy some reefer, coke and girls, as well as a bunch of overhead shots that are clearly intended to mean more than “just looking cool” (although they look damn cool as well) My only small issue with the film was that it did lose its comedic edge during its second half, which got a lot more serious, as well as its predictability, which after the initial seeds were planted, was pretty easy to figure out as the plotlines concluded. That said, the movie was still consistently easy to watch, if only because of its directing beauty, its quirky circumstances and my own personal connection to the lead character’s plight in life (I’ve recently been given a truckload of prescribed medication as well, and I’m not exactly sure if it’s helping or not, but they do make me feel like I’m floating around half the time…is that good?) The film also reminded me of my favorite movie from 2002, THE RULES OF ATTRACTION, which also had to do with 20-somethings and the lack of direction or communication in their lives. Granted, that flick was a lot more stylized and uninhibited, but if the pure hatred that some people had for that movie is any indication (or pure love), GARDEN STATE might be one that draws a line in the sand with this year’s audiences as well. I’m personally on the “me likey” side of that line.
(c) 2004 Berge Garabedian
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