Bottle Rocket Movie Review
Bottle Rocket Review
"Bottle Rocket" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Wes AndersonProducer : Polly Platt,Cynthia Hargrave
Screenwiter : Owen Wilson,Wes Anderson
Starring : Luke Wilson,Owen Wilson,Robert Musgrave,James Caan,Lumi Cavazos
The moment you know that Dignan's really lost it is during the trio's getaway
from a not-so-daring bookstore robbery, when he excitedly states, "We're
heading back to Bob's, we're gonna split up the loot, and go on the lam!"
In this hilarious first feature from writer/director Wes Anderson and
screenwriter Owen Wilson, a trio of young men with questionable work ethics try
in vain to become hardened criminals. Anthony (Owen's brother Luke Wilson) has
just "escaped" from a voluntary mental hospital with the help of old pal Dignan
(Owen), a neo-manic-depressive who's mapped out his life with felt-tip pen in a
75-year plan. Bob (Bob Musgrave) is the group's timid getaway driver whose
main qualification is that he owns a car.
After a practice robbery on Anthony's Dallas house, the plans for the first big
score, a strip center bookstore, are put into action. With literally hundreds
of dollars, the men then find their way to a middle-of-nowhere motel, planning
to return for the job that will launch them to the Big Time: robbing a cold
storage center.
Filmed by Texans in Texas, Bottle Rocket is a surprisingly funny look at
childish obsessions and "growing up" as a twentysomething. Wilson's dialogue
is maddeningly comical and oddly realistic--we've all had a friend like Dignan
who doesn't quite have all his screws in. The performances by the principal
actors are dead-on, too. Throw in a supporting role by James Caan (his best
since Honeymoon in Vegas) and a bizarre final heist, and you've got yourself a
pretty good film.
The only time the movie is derailed is during an ill-thought-out love sequence
with a motel housekeeper (Lumi Cavazos - Like Water From Chocolate). It
doesn't really seem to belong in this picture, but at least it's somewhat
entertaining. The picture's selection of music is a very unconventional one,
too, and while it's somewhat refreshing in its difference, it can also be
distracting.
Details aside, I recommend Bottle Rocket to anyone who enjoyed last year's The
Brothers McMullen. And while not the unequivocal success the latter film was,
Bottle Rocket is still a phenomenal ride that manages to be consistently funny,
without once resorting to someone being struck in the groin.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





