Finding Forrester Movie Review
Finding Forrester Review

"Finding Forrester" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Gus Van SantProducer : Sean Connery,Laurence Mark,Rhonda Tollefson
Screenwiter : Mike Rich
Starring Sean Connery, F Murray Abraham, Rob Brown, Michael Nouri, Anna Paquin, Busta Rhymes
They're already calling it "Good Will Hunting in the hood," and it's for good
reason. Gus Van Sant's latest takes us back to the inner city (or The Bronx,
at least) for a second verse of that feel-good feeling, with none other than
Sean Connery as a crotchety old shut-in who teaches (and learns from, natch) a
local teen (Rob Brown) who sneaks into his apartment.
If you've seen the trailer, you know the story. The local Bronx kids live in
fear of "the window," a ghostlike man who stares down at them creepily while
they shoot hoops. On a dare, young Jamal (Brown) sneaks into the place,
finding it cluttered with books. He's given a scare and Jamal runs off,
leaving his backpack behind.
The next day, his backpack returns from the sky, and lo and behold we learn of
Jamal's true passion -- not for basketball, no. For the written word. And
inside the pack, he finds his six journals, which apparently go everywhere with
him, have been edited and critiqued by the man in the window.
It's tortuous plotting, but eventually Jamal befriends the peeper (Connery),
who turns out to be none other than William Forrester, the famed author of a
single novel published some 50 years ago -- a novel which won a Pulitzer and
inexplicably drove its author into hiding.
An obvious stand-in for J.D. Salinger, Connery's character is a neurotic
shut-in, crippled with anxiety and unable to leave his home. He drinks and
pontificates and wears his socks inside out. And he starts teaching Jamal how
to write. (And as a side note from this professional writer to any aspiring
writer types reading this review -- please do not try to take Forrester's
advice.)
Events transpire and Jamal winds up in a Manhattan prep school where he is soon
accused of plagiarism due to his astounding, accelerated growth as a writer.
That he is one of few blacks in a ritzy, almost-all-white environment (you
know, he plays basketball) adds fuel to the fire. It'll take a miracle to get
Jamal out of this jam -- and you'll just have to imagine the shocking
conclusion of the film. Unless you already saw it in the trailer, I mean.
Unfortunately, the fact that the entire story of Finding Forrester can be told
fully in 60 seconds during a TV commercial doesn't really matter. This is the
kind of film where our young hero has time in every day for playing basketball,
writing at Forrester's place, writing at home (as he's not allowed to remove
his work from Forrester's apartment), plus, ostensibly, doing his schoolwork
and sleeping. (What, no part-time job?) This is a Hollywood movie, and it's
unabashedly so. Forrester is larger than life in the way that only Connery can
be. Jamal is larger than life as well, the actor that plays him custom-made to
repeat that Matt Damon/Ben Affleck Good Will Hunting Oscar magic. You'll hear
this a lot: Rob Brown was born in Harlem and has no training as an actor. And
he isn't acting here, he's reading his lines, being himself, and wondering how
the hell he got on the set of a big-time movie. The press is going to eat this
guy up like buttah.
Again, this is Hollywood, and all the old school wannabe-blockbuster elements
are there. There's a commentary on class and race, there's Busta Rhymes
provided for some well-done comic relief, and lest we begin to take the movie
seriously, there's Joey Buttafuoco making a cameo as a security guard (no,
really). The picture has the body of Girlfight and the ending of Scent of a
Woman. It is unoriginal and long, it is predictable and mildly pleasant, it is
cranked out for the least common denominator, and it won't offend anyone -- not
even the prep school bozos it vilifies. That's fine. Movies like this don't
hurt, and if they convince a few disenfranchised youths to pick up a pen and
start some writing, all the better.
While Finding Forrester is an average film that earns my average rating, the
real disappointment is its ultimately disheartening theme that makes you wonder
how it ever got made. (I wondered the same thing about Good Will Hunting, but
that's another story.) The problem is this: Much as in Hunting, which told us
that anybody can pull himself out of the hood... if they're a super-genius,
Finding Forrester says that anybody with a little talent can become a great
writer... if they're tutored by a Pulitzer Prize winner.
I guess those kids will have to keep dreaming after all. Merry Christmas.
Forrester found.
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Review by Christopher Null
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