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Few movies that I have seen really affect me on a visceral, emotional
level. Even when I've been sucked into the plot within the film's universe
of discourse, my conscious mind is still analyzing each individual element
of the scene being presented. SLC
Punk was by no means the most powerful film I've seen, and there
are a number of problems with its execution that keep it from entirely
hitting it's mark. There is, however, one scene in particular that grabbed
my gut and twisted it with all of the emotion the film's authors intended.
Before
you can watch the video clip on the next page, I should set the
stage. To explain the title, the film takes place in 1985 and centers
around the punk scene in Salt Lake City (ie. SLC). The entire film is
told from the perspective of Stevo (Matthew
Lillard), the self-proclaimed center of the punk "tribe"
in SLC. His left-hand man is "Heroine" Bob (Michael
A. Goorjian) who earned his nickname due to his revulsion to needles
and drugs.
Through
the device of the voice-over, writer/director James
Merendino weaves the entire film through a series of flashbacks
embedded within flashbacks. On the director's commentary track on the
DVD, Merendino
likened the style to exploring a web site by clicking on multiple links
as they are referenced within the narrative to help explain the story
as it unfolds. It is an extremely interesting technique which helps
to underscore the punk concept of anarchy by often leaving the audience
wondering where it all leads.
"We did
what we could to fuck things up, but the system was strong and they
were many and we were few. Bob and the rest of us had made an oath to
do absolutely nothing. We were going to waste our educated minds. We
had no other way of fighting. As I said, there just weren't enough of
us." - Stevo
What
really tells the viewer that Meredino
was a punk (in addition to the incredibly credible soundtrack) is his
complete disregard for stereotypes. Not only does he not present punks
as Hollywood always does, he doesn't even take on the common misconceptions
of punks in order to set them right. In fact, he populates his film
with people who happen to be punks, mods, or whatever. This complete
apathy for labels is contrasted entirely with Stevo's primary grudge:
posers, people who pretend to be who they aren't primarily for
effect.
NOTE: The
video clip on the next page may be a spoiler. If you want to watch the
film, I suggest you do so before reading further. If, however, you have
no intention of seeing the film I urge you to watch this clip as I think
that it easily stands alone.
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J.
Trent Adams is visionary technologist working on a better digital tomorrow.
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