A New Wave Movie Review
A New Wave Review
"A New Wave" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Jason CarveyProducer : Jason Carvey,Kambui Olujimi,Bruce Seymour
Screenwiter : Jason Carvey
Starring : Andrew Keegan,Lacey Chabert,John Krasinski,Dean Edwards,William Sadler,Caprice Benedetti
I don't understand much about A New Wave, I'm afraid. I don't understand what
the title's supposed to mean. I don't understand the tagline. I don't
understand how the plot was supposed to be compelling. And I don't understand
why it was made.
The film is a post-modern pastiche of heist flick and comedy, the kind
popularized by Reservoir Dogs and knocked off endlessly ever since it was
released. In A New Wave we have a bored bank teller named Desmond (Andrew
Keegan) who dreams of the big time, so he kicks in with pals Gideon (John
Krasinski) and Rupert (Dean Edwards), who plan to rob the bank where he works.
The "perfect plan" described on the DVD cover is pretty asinine: They other two
guys will simply go to the bank when Desmond's on duty, rob it, and have
Desmond fill up the moneybags. Desmond even tells them they're trained not to
trip the alarms, so no need to worry about cops. Gideon scripts the robbery as
if it's a movie, complete with dialogue and costumes. He's obsessed with other
films, so he borrows from every gangster flick in the book, including Dogs.
(Yes, A New Wave is yet another movie so unoriginal it openly borrows from
other movies in the hopes of being clever.)
About halfway through the film, we suddenly realize that Desmond is not just a
bank teller, he's also an aspiring artist, and he earns his first show on the
eve of the robbery. Wow, a big time art critic slumming in the suburbs (we're
not sure where, but it's somewhere near New York) even shows up at this
opening, and not only hooks him up with a city gallery, but buys one of the
pieces, too! Plus, the dad (William Sadler) of his super-hot girlfriend (Lacey
Chabert) offers him a job. Life may not be perfect, but it's good enough not to
ruin it by ripping off the bank where he works, right? Pals don't like it when
he backs out, and they rob the place anyway. I won't spoil what happens next,
but it's jarring and, frankly, not remotely appropriate for what we've endured
during the prior 80 minutes.
As a heist flick, A New Wave isn't very thrilling. As a comedy, the movie's a
near utter bust. Keegan simply doesn't have dramatic or comedic chops, leaving
it to the supporting cast to carry the movie. Only Krasinski is up to the task,
but his part is so derivative it doesn't work either. Jason Carvey's script is
as rough as his filmmaking. An obvious quickie, low-budget production, A New
Wave has a hurried, unfinished feel that is never transcended by the raw
material, something indies like Clerks (which probably cost less and had even
less star power) managed to do.
Be it known: I hereby declare a moratorium on Reservoir Dogs references,
explicit or implied, in all movies. Forever.
The DVD includes some (endless) deleted scenes and a gag reel.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





