Orange County
For
all the partying allegedly done in college, it sure is hard work getting
in there. At least it looks that way for Shaun Brumder (Colin Hanks),
who has the desire, the will, and the grades to get into Stanford.
And yet fate conspires
against him at every turn. His guidance counselor sends the wrong transcript;
Shaun's mother (Catherine O'Hara) can't stay sober long enough to impress
a member of Stanford's Board of Directors (Garry Marshall). Sadly, all
his hopes rest in the hands of his dangerously burned-out older brother
Lance (Jack Black).
Maybe it's payback
for coming to over-achieving rather late. Up until his junior year,
Shaun wanted nothing more than to surf, slack, and soak up his parents'
money. Then one of his buddies took on a wave too big. Death has a way
of changing things, and that darkly funny moment gave Shaun his ambition.
Orange County
knows that we've been down similar roads before, in a lot of bad teen
comedies, but a twisted script by Mike White and sure direction from
Jake Kasdan separate it from the pack.
As he did in Chuck
and Buck, White draws wildly dysfunctional characters but stops
just short of unbelievability. Shaun's family may be a horror, but every
one of them seems real. The former beauty married to the invalid may
seem an easy bit, but White makes sure that you understand how they
got there. Every speaking character, too, gets a memorable personality,
including White himself as an English teacher clearly rushed into a
classroom due to a teacher shortage. ("Romeo and Juliet makes you think
of who?" "Claire Danes?" "That's right!")
White's sensibilities
have found a good match in Kasdan. The two worked together on the late,
lamented Freaks and Geeks, a show that wasn't afraid to show
the awful truth about being a teen. Though Kasdan plays a few scenes
into farce, for the most part you never question his reality. Moreover,
the director has an excellent eye for casting and bringing out the best
in actors, reining in even the good but often hammy John Lithgow as
Shaun's estranged father.
Part of that eye
involves a sense of history, and Kasdan acknowledges those who have
come before in this genre. Sketch comedy greats like Lily Tomlin (as
Shaun's dippy guidance counselor), O'Hara, and Harold Ramis (Stanford's
Dean of Admissions) get to inhabit characters again, instead of just
getting cast as stunts. Ramis in particular has not been this relaxed
(and fun) onscreen since the original Ghostbusters. The only
comedy vet cast for his persona is Chevy Chase as the high school principal.
Even though his talent gets wasted, it gets wasted well.
The young leads
hold their own. Wisely, Hanks doesn't shy away from the more annoying
aspects of his character; Shaun may be a nice guy, but he tends to be
a whiner. It's a far cry from Hanks' recent turn in Band of Brothers.
At 24, he may not be as good as his father (who wasn't that good at
24, either) but he is on his way. As Shaun's ecologically minded girlfriend
Ashley, Schuyler Fisk has a simple luminousness. You may not understand
why she's with Shaun, but you understand why he's with her. Unfortunately,
though the script gives her personality, it does not give her much to
do beyond being "the girl."
Playing the requisite
slob, Black recaptures the energy he had in High Fidelity. When
used right, Black can seem a comic genius. Thankfully, he bubbles along
without taking over the film. He may owe more than a little to John
Belushi, but the homage plays with a sense that underneath the haze,
Lance has wasted a pretty good mind. Such a mixture of stupidity and
wit can be hard to pull off.
If Orange County
hits any disappointing note, it's that it does wrap up somewhat conventionally.
Still, if White and Kasdan had to compromise a little to get more into
the mainstream, it's a good trade-off, because both of them have voices
and visions that we need to experience again.
What's It Worth?
$8