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The Wackness [Theatrical Release]
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures Classics
Category: Theatrical Release


This item is no longer available

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews

Language: English (Unknown)
Number Of Items: 1

ASIN: B001C46P0W


Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Jonathan Levine's nostalgic reverie recreates a more innocent New York. In 1994, the Twin Towers watch over Manhattan, and Rudolph Giuliani reigns as mayor--not a bestselling author or presidential candidate. Recent high school grad Luke Shapiro (sleepy-eyed Josh Peck, Drake and Josh) plies the kind of trade Giuliani seeks to discourage: dope dealing. Otherwise, though, Luke's not such a bad kid. He sees a therapist, the pot-smoking Dr. Squires (Sir Ben Kingsley), and nurses a crush on the doctor's flirtatious stepdaughter, Stephanie (Juno's Olivia Thirlby). Hip-hop fills the air, and Luke spends his days grooving to Nas, the Notorious B.I.G., and A Tribe Called Quest, while selling cannabis out of an ice-cream cart (Wu-Tang rapper Method Man plays his Rasta supplier). As the summer heats up, Luke and Stephanie grow closer, while Squires and his wife, Kristin (Famke Janssen), drift apart. Meanwhile, Luke's family faces eviction if his father's fortunes don't improve, and he finds himself torn between the hot girl, the bummed-out shrink, and a job that could land him in the clink for a good long time--or save the Shapiros from moving to New Jersey. Though Levine (All the Boys Love Mandy Lane) doesn't judge his law-breaking protagonist, he does suggest that love can make a smart guy lose his head just as easily as lust--and even a trained psychiatrist can't always tell the difference. With Mary-Kate Olsen (Weeds) and Jane Adams (Happiness) as the spaciest of Luke's spacey customers. --Kathleen C. Fennessy


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Coming Of Age In A Wack World   August 9, 2008
Luke Shapiro (Josh Peck) is a an NYC teen spending his last summer before college selling weed out of a vendor cart. He's depressed, horny and has no friends except for an eccentric, stoner psychiatrist, Dr. Squires (Ben Kingsley), who provides therapy sessions in exchange for dimebags. Luke ends up falling for Squires' step-daughter Stephanie (Olivia Thirlby). For Luke it's his first meaningful relationship. But for Stephanie it's just a fun fling to relieve her summer boredom. Of course, Luke finds himself heart broken in the end.

I thought reviewer Ron's comparision of this film with the great novel "Catcher In The Rye" was right on the money. It's the 1990's rather than the 1950's, with more drugs and different music. But Luke and Holden Caulfield are facing many of the same issues, as they come of age in a world of lies, pain and phoniness.

For a movie about "the wackness" I found the ending to be incredibly life affirming, as both Luke and Squires achieve closure while sensing new opportunities on the horizon. Best film of the year and one of the best in many years. Go see it!



5 out of 5 stars Loved it. One of the year's best.   July 31, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Let me first say that this film is not for everyone. As a matter of fact, because it is dialogue-driven, many viewers may find it tedious. Fortunately, I found the dialogue to be realistic and thought-provoking. It's an interesting concept: when you're in your 50s or whatever, you look back on your life and sometimes wonder how you screwed it up. When you're a teenager, you're not really looking ahead in your life, but you're still thinking how screwed up you are (read THE CATCHER IN THE RYE). What I liked about this film was how it explored the difficulties of love not only for a teenager, but also someone who is over-the-hill. The old guy wants to recapture the first time he fell in love. Even with the help of drugs, he still can't. The teenager wants the first time that he fell in love to be memorable. It will be only because he got his heart broken. This is not a fairy tale that Hollywood usually pushes onto its viewers. This is a real love story for real people who are unlucky in love.


4 out of 5 stars Fear and Loathing in New York   July 26, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

"The Wackness" simply tells the story of two unhappy people. Actually, it's not that simple, not in the least. It's more accurate to say that it tells the story of two human beings who get through life as best they can, which is still not good enough; two men--one a teenager, the other middle-aged--are stuck in dreary situations with absolutely no one to turn to except each other, and in doing so, they give each other exactly what they need. The challenge for writer/director Jonathan Levine was telling this kind of story without turning it into a cliched buddy flick, and believe me, it easily could have gone in that direction. What we're instead given is a complex, thoughtful, and at times touching examination of two mismatched friends that somehow connect with one another. Levine shows some real talent here, crafting characters that we may not identify with but still care about.

The story takes place in New York City in the summer of 1994, back when Rudy Giuliani was elected as Mayor and hip hop and rap sounds ruled the music scene. As the oppressive heat and humidity beats down on the city, eighteen-year-old Luke Shapiro (Josh Peck) gets by as a drug dealer, specializing in marijuana. Despite a huge clientele, many of which went to school with him, he has no real friends to speak of; he gives them pot, they give him money, and that's that. He's virtually nonexistent to his parents, who spend most of their time fighting with one another. I distinctly remember the first moment we see his parents. Luke enters his apartment and walks between them on the way to his room: neither one of them pauses to say hello to their son. They just bicker about their financial woes, which the father (David Wohl) is responsible for.

Only one person seems to take an interest in Luke, and that's probably because he has problems of his own. Jeff Squires (Ben Kingsley) is a psychiatrist who has worked out a system of receiving marijuana in exchange for Luke's therapy sessions. But his therapy is not of the classic variety; Squires believes that the only prescription Luke needs is to live the life of a normal teenage boy, and that definitely includes sex. As it turns out, Squires is after the same thing, seeing as he's trapped in a loveless marriage with his wife, Kristin (Famke Janssen). He claims to hate her, but as the film progresses, we begin to feel that he only hates what she's become, that he would like nothing better than to recapture the spark that brought them together in the first place. Unfortunately, that seems incredibly unlikely. All he has left is his own pain, which he continuously numbs with prescription medications and an assortment of illegal substances.

Interwoven with this story is a subplot exploring the developing relationship between Luke and Squires' stepdaughter, Stephanie (Olivia Thrilby). You can tell how differently each person views the relationship: Luke believes he's falling in love while Stephanie just kind of rolls with the punches, having fun but not necessarily loving him back. She claims that it doesn't matter where their relationship is heading because they're already there in the moment. "I see the dopeness in everything," she muses, "and you just see the wackness." That may be true, but doesn't he have every reason to see the world that way? Doesn't her stepfather? He warns that Stephanie will eventually get bored and break Luke's heart, which doesn't show much trust on his part. Then again, it's doubtful he trusts anybody, least of all himself.

At one point, Squires tells Luke the one thing that makes life in general seem abundantly clear: "Sometimes it's right to do the wrong thing, and right now is one of those times." Is this to say that sometimes it wrong to do the right thing? It seems that both characters grapple with this, because they eventually have to make some serious decisions. Luke, for instance, is now only weeks away from going to college, and the status of his relationship with Stephanie remains to be seen. So does the future of his drug dealing business; while never explicitly stated, both he and the audience seem to know that he can't do that forever. At the same time, Squires must come to terms with his failing marriage, and in the process learn to cope without numbing himself. I'm not exactly sure whether or not he succeeds. By the end of the film, we suspect that he's long since been doomed to a life of depression and hopelessness.

Granted, that's not a very positive outlook. But if you think about real life, which sees many people needlessly suffering, it's understandable how someone could fall into that emotional trap. It's always a matter of wanting to escape, to claw your way out of the trap and start going in a different direction. That could require you to do the wrong thing, but even if it does, at least you'll realize that you've gained more than you lost. In spite of their troubles, Luke and Squires gain each other's friendship, albeit a very unconventional one. Luke himself gains wisdom and maturity, and while it's unclear how he'll use them in life, it seems certain he'll remember what it took to gain them. This is the kind of message you'd expect to have screamed at you, but that isn't the case with "The Wackness"; this movie is calm and quiet in its delivery, allowing you to hear the message without feeling attacked. For everything it accomplished on levels of story, character, and pacing, the quietness is what I appreciated the most.


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