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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Teens > Rollercoaster (1999/Ardustry DVD)

Rollercoaster (1999)

 

Picture: B-     Sound: B-     Extras: D     Film: B+

 

 

Honest, smart films about teens and growing up are few and far between.  When they do arrive and get noticed, it becomes an event, as the incredible Donnie Darko (2001, reviewed elsewhere on this site) strongly proves.  While Hollywood continues to make films for this market designed to degrade and have absolute contempt for that age group, other independent films about growing up that work continue to get made.  Along with David Gordon Green’s George Washington (2000, out on DVD from Criterion) is another amazing gem.

 

Rollercoaster (1999) is not a remake of the Sensurround thriller form the 1970s that inspired Wolfgang Peterson’s In The Line of Fire (1993) with Clint Eastwood, but a bright multi-character study of five teens who go to an amusement park off-season.  Some are there to have fun, but a young couple intends to commit suicide, in part due to the girl’s pregnancy.  Whether abortion figures in the equation or not is made irrelevant, since this plan expresses how they feel out of control of their lives, which are dead-end enough that they are ready to kill themselves.

 

It is hard to say which one of their friends will join them, but they are in the park for the day, regardless.  The couple in question is Darrin (Kett Turton) and Chloe (Crystal Buble), who believe they love each other, including in such a finalized expression of it.  Darrin’s rather silent brother Justin (Brent Glenen), obviously cares about his brother, joins them in what seems somehow unexpected.  There’s Stick (Brendan Fletcher), a hyperactive loud mouth who is an old friend of Darrin’s, and Sanj (Sean Amsing), who also has a mouth on him.

 

The first thing to ask is the most morbid, obvious curiosity: will they do it?  Will they kill themselves?  If that is what the film was all about, that would be pointless, but this is an important film.  In content, it deals with the lives of yet another generation that is offered little opportunity and hope, nor any places they can really turn to.  Also, this film was made in Canada, a country that has unfairly had its cinema trivialized.  This is a landmark that proves to be far from trivial, besting Hollywood and other cinemas, from France to the so-called “independents” in its consistency and richness.  This also announces writer/director Scott Smith as a very important filmmaking talent, but since we are in an era where intelligent films are treated like garbage, he does not get the respect and career he deserves.  After all, where are the murders, car crashes, loud music, and digital effects?

 

Previously, Canada has given us David Cronenberg, but he superceded his Canadian roots and his U.S. destination to become an auteur in his own right, so Canada did not get a boost from that.  They, of course, do get a great boost from Hollywood productions shot there, but that is irrelevant.  Atom Egoyan is from Canada, and is the kind of “boutique” talent that has stayed Canadian, but not helped that country either.  Smith is a good few years ahead of what could be an important cinema in the making.

 

Besides the ignorance that “there’s already a film with that title from Hollywood”, any film about teens that do not degrade the audience, the good ones are ignored as much as the people they are about in real life are.  Trying to over-generalize, as so many ignorant, failed adults do that “all kids are bad”, this attitude continues to go unrecognized as an accepted, institutionalized version of child abuse.  It is this kind of disregard that allows teen pregnancy, rape, incest, pedophilia, and poverty to flourish for up and coming kids.  They cannot all be A students; robo-children being readied for jobs that might be there later.  They especially cannot be expected to fit a fictional version of childhood where they should always be happy no matter what.  This is why dysfunctional behavior continues at an epidemic proportion, why suicide rates for all kinds of kids continues to be an epidemic.

 

That behavior can be seen in this film, and Stick seems to be the only one who has the energy to move forward, if he could only just focus it.  However, he has many other personal issues, starting with watching his friend Darrin celebrating before killing himself.  They are all engaging in underage drinking, recreational drug use, and silly physical altercations.  However, the film is much deeper and far smarter than that, being able to see under this activity as the layers of façade it is.  Smith is bold, keenly observant, and fearless to get to the truth in all their lives.  Hollywood films have not been this smart since Little Darlings or My Bodyguard for this age group.  It could be added that, as good as they are, Kids, L.I.E., Bully, and The Believer seem to make the audience pay a price of a specter of horror unspoken for us to have honestly-portrayed teens.  Rollercoaster does not have that pretense.

 

The 1.85 X 1 image is not anamorphically enhanced, but is off of a good transfer that shows off the exceptionally clever and fascinating cinematography by Robert (Bob) Aschmann, while the Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo may lack surrounds, but is nicely recorded.  The only extras in this edition are trailers for this and a few other Ardustry films on DVD, but an audio commentary was done for what was likely the Canadian DVD and is sadly not here.  However, this is so important a film to see that that can be issued at a later date.

 

The other way I became aware of this film was in the new version of Robin Wood’s book Hollywood from Vietnam to Reagan… and Beyond (reviewed elsewhere on this site), which offers further detail with spoilers, about the film.  Once again, he called this one right.  Now that it is on DVD in the U.S., I cannot urge you strongly enough to get your hands on this film and watch it through, because when all is said and done, Scott Smith’s Rollercoaster is simply going to be known as a classic!

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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