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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
I know a girl from Baltimore..., 19 April 2004
17 year old Igby Slocumb (Kieran Culkin) is the youngest child of a pill-popping iron-willed mother Mimi Slocumb (Susan Sarandon) and schizophrenic father Jason Slocumb (Bill Pullman). Resilient to his mother’s demands, and fighting against his Godfather’s (Jeff Goldblum) capitalistic falseness, Igby gets kicked out of school and hides out in the bohemian Manhattan underworld.Families can be important to a person’s career, just ask Charlie Sheen, Emilio Estevez or George W. Bush. Or perhaps ask Burr Steers, Nephew to National Book Award-winning author Gore Vidal, descendent of U.S. Vice President Aaron Burr, great-grandson of Oklahoma founder and U.S. Senator Thomas Gore - relative of U.S. Vice President Al Gore, or then again, maybe not. Burr Steers, much like the lead character of his first screenplay, and directorial debut, Igby Goes Down spent most of his youth battling the pressures of growing up in a demanding ‘successful’ family and spent his twenties between jobs, doing small theatre acting jobs, as well as managing to land a place as ‘Flock-of-Seagulls Roger’ in Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction. In the opening credits, Igby and his fascist brother Oliver (Ryan Philippe)’s past is played out between Uwe Fahrenkrog-Petersen’s wonderful score. Although the scenes are brief, they manage to expertly depict the direction of the film. Igby’s father Jason (Bill Pullman), and mother (Susan Sarandon) bicker at the table about personal hygiene, before Jason leaves the table and returns naked to propose a toast to ‘good hygiene’, it’s an opening that manages to be funny and yet saddening, dramatic yet light-hearted. The bitter-sweet mood to the film is its crowning glory, and without it, Igby Goes Down perhaps would have fallen into a ‘coming of age’ drama or perhaps a comment on the aspects of 21st century parenthood, but Igby manages to flirt freely with genre precincts and come out smelling beautifully. Away from the opening credits, Igby’s wit and intelligence becomes the driving force of the film, whether being sent to counselling or to military school, the audience is under the spell of Igby’s charm, which is as much down to Steer’s writing as it is to Culkin’s utterly enduring performance (who else knows the hardships of family success than Culkin or Steers?). Sookie Saperstein (Clare Danes) soon manages to end up involved with Igby’s life, in which they develop a genuinely moving relationship, whether discussing their schizophrenic / pseudo-bohemian parents or planning to run away to ‘the sunshine state’. Danes is perfectly cast, and manages to be both intelligent and charming, instead of the usual ‘female as sexual object’ pastiche that appear all too often in films involving the lives of teenagers. D.H. (Jeff Goldblum) is also alarmingly accurate as Igby’s yuppie Godfather and the prime example of what Igby might become if he was to follow his mother’s intentions. Amanda Peet plays Rachael, the drug-addled ‘dancer who doesn’t dance’ who falls victim to D.H.’s disinterest of their sexual relationship, and into the arms of drugs use. But although the film enlists truly stellar performances from the entire cast (and indeed crew), the film really belongs to Bill Pullman as Jason Slocumb, the schizophrenic dad who despite a lack of screen time manages to put on a dazzlingly saddening performance of deteriorating mental health, as well as Jason Slocumb Junior (Igby) that sees Kieran Culkin portray intelligence, downright coolness, as well hard-hitting emotional scenes with utter confidence and sheer brilliance. Culkin’s performance alone would have made the film, but the fact that the entire list of characters was so brilliantly cast and performed only adds to the sobering ambiance of the film. If someone was to search long and hard for faults in the film they would only perhaps come up with Ryan Phillipe’s Oliver, who doesn’t get enough screen time or memorable lines, but Phillipe’s performance is not to be criticised, merely the character, which may be explained by Steer’s comment that Igby Goes Down was originally written as a part of a much larger story. Igby Goes Down is a shining example of what can be achieved with a great script and excellent performances from all involved, and a personal triumph for Burr Steers (first time writer / director) as well as Kieran Culkin, which has allowed him to leap from former child star into brilliant ‘one-to-watch’ adult actor. The film may never be recognised as a mainstream classic, but looks set to receive a well deserved cult following. With now a wide host of talented young writer / directors; such as Wes Anderson, Richard Kelly, Paul Thomas Anderson, Christopher Nolan and now Burr Steers, let’s hope their intelligence can be enjoyed for decades to come.
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