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The Buchtelite

The Editorially Independent Voice of The University of Akron

The Buchtelite

The Editorially Independent Voice of The University of Akron

The Buchtelite

Paranoid Park is vague, hard to follow

“There is a very fine line between mood and melodrama. Some directors have mastered the art of balancing beautiful orchestration with moments of silence. A handful have even perfected the skill of awkward camera angles and lighting to impress upon the audience a change in affect or ambience.”

There is a very fine line between mood and melodrama.

Some directors have mastered the art of balancing beautiful orchestration with moments of silence.

A handful have even perfected the skill of awkward camera angles and lighting to impress upon the audience a change in affect or ambience.

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It is these directors that have earned critical praise and the love of movie-goers everywhere.

But there are a few directors that have inspired acclaim, that, as I watch their movies, I  stare in disbelief that they have made the money he has.

For movies like Paranoid Park, the consequences of risk taking leave the viewer with such a stale taste the movie becomes unbearable at times.

I commend Mr. Van Sant for his gamble of a no-name, no-previous-credit cast.

But I cannot sit back and listen to these rave reviews on a film so flimsily constructed that it took me three days to finish it.

Gus Van Sant prides himself on his art-house films that push the limits of traditional filmmaking.

However, this limit-pushing results in a discombobulated and uneven pacing that leads only to frustration and irritation.

Park opens with a young man in his mid-teens. We quickly learn that he has been responsible for the death of a security guard near the train yards.

Quiet and mild-mannered, Alex just loves to skateboard. Van Sant made his one brilliant decision to film portions of his movie in 8mm.

This vintage look gives a brief breath of fresh air into a plethora of stagnation and blasé dribble.

Through first person narrative, Alex tells his tale of how his weekend treks to Paranoid Park, a skate park in the ghetto of northern Washington, led to the demise of this unfortunate security guard.

When the guard is found dead, having been bludgeoned in the head by a skateboard and cut in half by an oncoming train, an investigation begins in the school.

The only suspects are those in the skateboarding crowd as a skateboard is found because the scene of the crime. Alex denies any involvement and gives an alibi for every time of that fateful weekend.

The dialogue drags the viewer through a muddied plot with less-than-par acting and writing that is better suited for an MTV after school special.

For a director who has shown us his talents in films like Finding Forrester and Good Will Hunting, it’s disappointing when a movie this mediocre is created.

Perhaps the most unsatisfactory facet of this movie is the wasted potential.

The story is conventional, but with proper execution, could have been a mesmerizing coming-of-age tale of personal deception and murder.

With a cast better suited to convey the internal turmoil of our protagonist, the film might have risen above mediocrity.

While I could lie and say there are no words to convey my disappointment in Mr. Van Sant (obviously, as I have just so eloquently destroyed his film), I can only warn the general public about wasting 90 minutes of their life, not to mention the price of admission.

Consider yourself warned. 

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