Braff’s ‘Garden’ is a mixed bunch
ALLEN MacDONALD
The story for writer/director Zach Braff’s feature debut isn’t
complicated: a young man, Andrew Largeman (Braff), returns home after
a nine-year absence to attend the funeral of his estranged mother.
While there, he reconnects with friends (Peter Sarsgaard), attempts
to reconcile with his equally estranged father Gideon (Ian Holm) and
falls in love with a tender hearted waif (Natalie Portman), who is as
full of life as Andrew is lacking. That’s about it.
With a premise like this, the quality of the film is totally
dependent on the execution. “Garden State” succeeds, though without
consistency, and with a lot of help from a talented cast. The best
compliment I can give it, though slightly backhanded, is that it is a
brilliantly executed student film.
I saw the trailer for “Garden State” online a few months ago at
the request of a friend. I watched it and found it quite moving. It
was a series of images that were, at once, touching and funny. It
captured that right balance of life’s up and downs -- the unintended
comedy that often results from tragedy and it just felt ... sweet.
The images were united by a Frou Frou song called “Let Go,” which,
in hindsight, I feel may have invested them with more depth than they
actually had when pulled back apart and dropped into the movie they
were advertising. When watching the film, I felt the soundtrack was
well chosen, but acted more as a band-aid to a limping narrative that
couldn’t quite hold itself together alone.
That’s not to say “Garden State” doesn’t have some genuine emotion
behind it. It does. There’s a beautiful notion at its core: it’s
about returning to the house you grew up in and realizing it is no
longer home, and that the only home you’ll have in the future is the
one you make for yourself.
Braff has bravely thrown some nakedly emotional moments onto the
screen and for that, I applaud him. It’s too easy these days to be
the cynic, making apathetic criticisms and judgments of those around
him from a place of emotionally disconnected superiority.
Unfortunately, Braff never earns his emotional payoffs and as a
result, the material never transcends its pretentious core.
And “Garden State” is at times pretentious. It’s cinematography
and production design is over-stylized. When we first meet Andrew,
he’s in a room that’s painted all white, with a bed that has white
sheets, a white end table and a white alarm clock. This, I imagine,
is the use of symbolism to drive home the point that Andrew’s life
has reached a surreal numbness where there is no pleasure or pain,
only consciousness. I get that.
When Andrew closes the mirrored doors of his medicine cabinet, and
the line separating the doors slices down the middle of his face, I
get that too -- he’s feeling conflicted. In scenes like these, I feel
Braff is wielding the visual equivalent of a sledgehammer.
The main problem is that the emotions aren’t earned; they’re just
displayed randomly. Andrew starts the film in an
antidepressant-fueled state of numbness and, as he abandons his
medication, is supposed to start opening up to the world. Instead, we
get a series of scenes where he’s the straight man as his wacky
friends do crazy stuff around him, most notably at an after hours
party. He’s an inactive protagonist, and that’s a hard kind to pull
off.
Andrew doesn’t slowly come out of his shell so much as he makes a
sudden leap, telling off his friends and declaring his feelings. A
character has to change in incremental steps that make the
transformation believable. The viewer needs to see outside forces
compel Andrew into action; to witness him going through a progression
of emotions that build up to a realization about himself that allows
him to whip his life into shape.
What “Garden State” does well is use humor to endear you to its
characters. Braff displays an oddball sense of humor, more grin
inspiring than hysterical. But he knows the funniest jokes are the
ones that are rooted in pain.
That can also describe the characters: Andrew’s best friend from
high school, Mark (Sarsgaard), buries people in a Jewish cemetery for
a living. He supplements that meager income by opening the casket and
stealing valuables off the body. Mark’s mother (Jean Smart) is a
dysfunctional mess, kind-hearted, tough and sleeping with a guy he
graduated high school with who now works at Medieval Times as a
jousting knight.
Andrew’s love interest, Sam (Natalie Portman), is epileptic and
manic, given the spurts of joy and sorrow with equal aplomb. Sam
likes to feel life, absorbing as much of the spectrum of human
emotions as she can muster, because it makes her feel alive.
She’s also a pathological liar and her character can be a bit too
precious at times. She’s the kind of idiosyncratic, eccentric girl
who you fall in love with on the screen, but would be ready to give
the heave ho in real life after 48 hours because, let’s face it,
she’d drive you insane.
But Portman is a natural, engaging actress that excels in the role
despite its limitations. And, it should be noted, I don’t care what
movie she’s in -- it causes me physical pain to watch Natalie Portman
cry. As soon as the first tear stains her cheek, I’m emotionally
invested.
Braff has a real talent for delving into the lives of some unique
people, but his dialogue needs more subtlety. It’s on the nose,
didactic. When Andrew finally has a long simmering confrontation with
his father, it fails to unearth the raw pain that can occur when
parents and children who know each others’ buttons start pushing. It
plays more like a teenage fantasy argument, where the son tells the
dad how he’s been totally wrong for 20 years, and dad remains silent
because he knows his son is right.
That’s the distinction that prevents “Garden State” from breaking
past its film school mold.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 30, recently earned a master’s in screenwriting
from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
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