Elephant Movie Review
Elephant Review

"Elephant" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Gus Van SantProducer : Dany Wolf
Screenwiter : Gus Van Sant
Starring : Alex Frost,Eric Deulen,John Robinson,Elias McConnell,Jordan Taylor,Carrie Finklea
Gus Van Sant has made an eclectic career out of portraying vastly different
avenues that adolescents use to focus the anxieties they grapple with. From the
strangely compelling My Own Private Idaho to the more mainstream Good Will
Hunting, he remains consciously aware of the often erratic motives of youth
while creating an effective story.
With Elephant, he takes a more documentarian approach, shooting seemingly
handheld style right up in the faces of the teens he is following, or right
above the back of their shoulders. He follows a wide range of clichéd
characters, from jock to nerd to slacker, up until the moment two of them go
haywire on their fellow schoolmates with weapons purchased off of the Internet.
And, yes, it is fairly obvious who the troublemakers will be as soon as they
appear on camera.
Though the pacing feels painstakingly slow as you watch the back of a head walk
casually through corridors, or from the athletic field to the classroom, it
also allows for a distinctive survey of where this particular student fits into
the environment. Parts of conversation and activity filter through as the
camera glides with its current subject, providing instant comfort or agitation
when they pass a pleasant peer versus a stressful situation.
The other fortunate immediacy of close range is that, regardless of the
particular angst being experienced, there is a strong sympathy conveyed without
judgment. No matter which stereotype you most identify with, the problems of
being a teenager are so universal you realize it’s all stemming from the same
mix of hormones and identity seeking.
But that most of the characters portrayed are extremes gets so predictable you
don’t want to see them fulfill their roles. You spot the bulimics before their
bathroom trip. Their synchronization of behavior brings laughter, but it’s more
laughter of ridiculousness than the nervous laughter at the illness that it
should be. You don’t need to see the homely, quiet girl get picked on because
it’s obvious that she does as soon as she steps the opposite direction from her
gym class.
Despite these moments, there are many emotional sections that hold up well in
their minor details. When one young girl is arguing with her friends that she
needs to spread her time between her boyfriend and shopping, it’s piercing when
she gives into the “but I’m your best friend” pressure. The slacker who
responsibly calls his brother to pick up their drunken father is handled with
beautiful matter-of-fact simplicity, only matched by the principal’s knowing
and caring look as he sends him away without a lecture.
Through its ups and downs, Van Sant has managed to create an ensemble portrait
of one of the toughest time periods in everyone’s life. It actually becomes
poignant to see the forming of coping with life’s difficulties in action. And
at a mere 81 minutes of screen time, it’s worth a look by those who’ve been a
part of a crowd as well as those who never fit in.
Reviewed as part of the 2003 New York Film Festival.
Room at the zoo.
Reviewer: Rachel Gordon




