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    Monday, November 14, 2011

    Lost 20-Somethings in the Movies - A Four Week Mini Film Club Challenge

    (2 months of inactivity, you'd think I'd return to offer you some TIFF reviews?  Nope, keep waiting...sorry...)

    The Premise:

    It's like a book club but with movies!  Participants will watch one designated film per week tied to the theme of "Lost 20-Somethings" and discuss.  The 4 week series will conclude with St Elmo's Fire on Friday, December 9th @ 9pm where participants are encouraged to get together and attend the screening at TIFF Lightbox.  In person attendance is not required, you can also watch the movie on your own.  As all discussion will take place online (or be transcribed to appear online?), feel free to participate from all over the globe.  Discussion points, responses, etc can be posted in the comments of this blog, submitted to me privately, on Facebook, where ever... I will then consolidate and repost here.

    As with all film viewings and challenges that I propose, even if you don't actively want to participate you are still welcome to watch the movies, read the blogs, and come along for the ride.  Even if no one else takes me up on this, I'm still gonna go ahead with the movies and post my thoughts in the coming weeks.  I really do hope some of you will join in the discussion though.

    Background:

    It started with TIFF Bell Lightbox releasing it's fall film schedule that included the return of the "Back to the 80's" series, this time including my favourite Brat Pack movie St Elmo's Fire.  I shared my excitement about this with a few people including Mike, who has never seen the movie.  He'd watched the trailer previously and wasn't overly impressed, he thought the characters seemed like a bunch of jerks (or something to that effect) therefore why would he want to watch a movie about them?

    Then a couple nights ago I was shuffling a few movies around to make everything fit on the shelf and found myself holding my copy of Singles, which made me think...now there's a group of annoying characters.  In fact, the reason why I didn't think much of Singles the first and second time I saw it was because Bridget Fonda's character was dippy, Matt Dillon an ass, and I wanted to knock Kyra Sedgwick's teeth out whenever she spoke.  Clearly something about the film grew on me though because I eventually went out and bought myself a copy.

    Another film that is often referenced alongside Singles is Reality Bites, which was also lost on me the first time I saw it (as a bright-eyed 15 year old who believed that graduating from university would solve all of life's problems), but I grew to love it more with each viewing leading up to my mid-20's.  If you think about it though, lotta those characters are whiny, neurotic, and self-important too.

    So what is it that makes these films iconic favs amongst quasi-directionless Gen X-ers?  I guess somewhere along the line, though we'd like to think ourselves less annoying than these slackers on the big screen, we can relate.  Assuming most readers of this blog have navigated through their "Lost 20-somethings" stage (and maybe moved on to the "Lost 30-somethings" stage?  Please tell me the 40's bring more direction though, I don't know how many more decades of this I want to wade thru :P ) I thought it would be interesting to re-visit these movies and have a little discussion on them.  There's a wide range of topics that can be touched on from what makes the films likable despite some unappealing personalities, to how our own lives parallel the films' events (or not), to the cultural significance portrayed in the backdrop of the stories, etc. etc.

    The Films:

    Week 1 (during week of Nov 14): Singles dir. Cameron Crowe
    Week 2 (during week of Nov 21): Reality Bites dir. Ben Stiller
    Week 3 (during week of Nov 28): Your Choice*
    Week 4 (Friday, December 9): St Elmo's Fire dir. Joel Schumacher

    *Admittedly I had some difficulty designating a 4th film that would closely mirror the theme alongside the other three movies.  As mentioned Singles and Reality Bites are often compared side by side, and Reality Bites and St. Elmo's Fire are in many ways the 80's vs 90's version of the same story.  I could not find a 4th movie that fit in quite as perfectly, so rather than choose one film and then have people point out all the obvious differences and incompatibilities, I'm just going to let everyone choose their own "Lost 20-Somethings" movie.  There are so many...I haven't even decided on my own, below are some of my considerations...

    The Big Chill - An 80's film that would balance out the 80's/90's ratio of the viewing list.  It fits the bill of ensemble cast of friend characters and all the interactions between them.  Though I've yet to grow to love the movie, I do find myself re-watching it every few years so there must be reason for that.  Sadly I can relate to the circumstances for their reunion, maybe that's my connection to the film.  It is an 80's film, however the characters are not 20-somethings but 30-somethings (maybe after I get through this decade I will come to understand the film better?) making them part of the Boomer generation instead of Gen X.

    About Last Night - This one always seems to come up in the recommendations column whenever I do a search on Singles.  I've never seen it, but from the description seems more like rom-com than coming of age or Gen X directionless-ness.  However, having never seen it, I would kind of like to...

    Mallrats - Tipping the scale towards the 90's if I pick this one, but it does feature directionless 20-somethings at their finest.  But with all things Kevin Smith-Jersey, the Kevin Smith part of it does seem to overpower any other underlying themes the movie might have.

    Ghost World - The epitome of directionless youth.  However if you want to nitpick, Enid and Rebecca are high school grads thus not 20+.  Also the two of them do not equal an ensemble cast.  In the movie the characters would be considered more Gen Y, however Daniel Clowes wrote these characters as high school grads from the early 90's thus making them originally part of Gen X. (It can also be argued that I don't need to watch Ghost World again to write about it, I can pretty much recite all the dialogue from memory.  I watched it numerous times during my 20's whenever I felt blue because I was lost...so needless to say I watched it A LOT)

    1 comment:

    1. Almost any 90's film from Kevin Smith or Richard Linklater seems like a pretty good call. I would vote for the movie SubUrbia, but sadly it has never made it to dvd. Good luck finding it.
      Also:
      Garden StaTe
      Human Traffic
      MeTropolitan

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