Links to Full Text
The NewYork Times
The New York Observer
New York Newsday
Entertainment Today
E! Online
The Boston Globe
Los Angeles Times
LA Weekly
San Francisco Chronicle
Screen International
Hollywood Reporter
Variety
Reviews Home (quotes pg.)
|
Reviews - Entertainment Today
What Alice Found
by Brent Simon
Winner of a Special Jury Award at this year’s
Sundance Film Festival, writer-director Dean Bell’s What Alice
Found is a simple little road movie with restorative powers. Vacuumed
free of any indie scene smugness or self-satisfaction, the film
charts its central figure’s transformation from emotionally
impoverished waif to sexually charged, psychologically emboldened
young woman while also along the way serving as an estimably poker-faced,
non-blinking examination of a closeted American subculture. Bell’s
directorial touch eschews either flowery technical gimmickry or
dense, mood-crafting prowess—he’s not likely to be heralded
as an auteur—but his film commands your respect nonetheless
because you’re peering into an intimate snow globe travelogue
where everything feels native and relevant to the story being told.
The film starts with Alice (Emily Grace), a quiet
young New Hampshire girl who, demoralized by what she views as a
dead-end existence, gathers up some cash and her courage and heads
south to Florida to visit an old high school friend. After her car
craps out, retired couple Sandra (Tony Award winner Judith Ivey)
and Bill (Bill Raymond) take pity on her and invite her to join
them in their RV. Since they’re heading south themselves and
Alice is short on money, the couple even invites her to save on
bus fare and ride with them. Alice acquiesces, and intercut flashbacks
clue us in to her reasons for leaving and the interpersonal threads
she left dangling when she left. Soon, though, Alice comes to understand
her good Samaritans’ circuitous route and why Bill announces
the arrival of the “Honey Bunny Wagon” at every approaching
truck stop. Has she gotten herself in over her head?
Shot on a shoestring on digital video, what Bell’s
movie most has going for it is a fine merging of means, material
and ego. Ergo, What Alice Wants is a film for which, non-cynically,
the word “appealing” might be the very best descriptor
— it holds your interest nonchalantly but firmly, the encircling
hand-grasp of a parent protecting an oblivious child as they cross
the street. If Grace is a bit of a stretch to pass as a teenager—and
thus the movie loses out a bit on its emotional pegging of her as
a wide-eyed innocent—she still delivers a solid performance,
notable for its measured tones and refusal to give in to histrionic
showiness. Ivey, meanwhile, is simply sublime; her superb turn is
easily worthy of a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination should
members actually be moved to fulfill their electoral obligation
and sift beyond simply the most aggressively lobbied candidates.
Hollywood often likes to pummel us about the
head and shoulders with the big and the dramatic, but “coming-of-age”
stories are—or should be, at least—about magnifying
small and subtle shifts in attitudinal gradation and showing us
the impetus for this change, and for a movie built chiefly around
one event, What Alice Found blissfully retains a measure of ambiguity
even as we see and feel how it will affect Alice further down the
road. I’m not sure that I can ever remember basking, in the
moment, in the warm glow of a leap in maturation, and I can’t
recall any friend or acquaintance regaling me with a similar story
of chin-stroking, Doogie Howser -esque personal growth either, no
matter how sensational a night, day or week we’d had. Kudos
to Bell and What Alice Found for playing its hand quietly and powerfully.
Visit www.whatalicefound.com for more information. (Factory Films/Highland
Entertainment, R)
|
|