Garden State Movie Review
Garden State Review

"Garden State" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Zach BraffProducer : Pamela Abdy,Gary Gilbert,Dan Halsted,Richard Klubeck
Screenwiter : Zach Braff
Starring : Zach Braff,Natalie Portman,Peter Sarsgaard,Ian Holm,Jean Smart
Even before he finds out his mother has died, Andrew Largeman (Zach Braff) is
depressed — that much we can tell. His medicine cabinet is stocked with
seemingly infinite amounts of antidepressants, which seem to mute his
depression without addressing it. Although we are told he is an actor who has
just finished a high-profile TV part (playing, as several characters recognize,
“the retarded quarterback”), it’s hard to picture him coming alive in his work;
he barely says a word.
Garden State, an auspicious writing and directing debut from Braff (of TV’s
charming Scrubs), is about Largeman’s return to his New Jersey hometown, and
like Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation, it’s more about mood and moments than
telling a single story (and like that film, it’s about an actor feeling numb to
the “real” world). Indeed, the plot feels very much out of short fiction — and,
we can’t help but notice, possible autobiography; Braff is a young actor from
Jersey, too.
After his mother’s funeral, Largeman reconnects with some old high school
friends, sort of; he avoids his psychiatrist father (Ian Holm); and he finds
solace in Sam (Natalie Portman), a pathological liar and new friend. The film
begins as almost a series of deadpan vignettes — and Braff, who can get through
entire scenes without hardly moving at all, certainly gives good deadpan. There
is a danger here, in asking us to watch the reaction shots of a character who
barely reacts at all. But as quiet and still as Braff can be, he’s also blessed
with an inherent likeability — it’s no surprise that he works so well as a
sitcom lead. As a director, he surrounds himself with movement and pretty pop
songs.
His film is by turns over- and under-written — his characters occasionally
pause to articulate points better left unsaid (“I’ve been on a journey these
past few days”), while Largeman’s relationship with both parents, dead and
alive, evolves from hazily troubled to just plain hazy. Despite some nice
actorly gestures on Ian Holm’s part, the parent-child material is oddly placed
off-screen, except when it’s overexplained in dialogue. The supporting
characters from Largeman’s past are interchangeable, with the exception of
gravedigging stoner Mark (Peter Sarsgaard) who emerges from the pack late in
the film. Sarsgaard, Braff, and Portman anchor an extended, thankfully literal
“journey” that is the emotional centerpiece of the film.
During this sequence and elsewhere, Garden State is delightful; if it seems as
if I’ve taken several paragraphs to say as much, it’s because the film’s warmth
sneaks up on you. At first, you watch with detached amusement; eventually the
characters start to feel like home. This is a sweet and funny movie, especially
in its handling of the relationship between Andrew and Sam. Natalie Portman
plays the latter as a down-to-earth screwball heroine, winningly embracing her
own faults. He’s quiet and she lies, yet the audience feels that they work
together. Braff is just as comfortable evoking feelings as he is writing about
them, and the former is where his movie really soars.
I confess relief in reporting that Garden State is not shot on digital video,
or with a handheld camera, as much as the dreary surroundings might beg for
such indie-movie cred-bearers. Braff is intent on making a movie that’s
actually worth watching, and he has an eye for memorable images: Andrew and Sam
zipping around on an old-timey motorcycle (complete with sidecar), and the
characters’ unexpected entrance into a darkened back room of a hotel, where
low-level employees spy on guests through peepholes.
Most movies — especially romantic comedies — involving a character’s
reassessment of himself can be so tedious: “I thought I had everything, but I
was wrong!” the hero will explain to those around him, who will inexplicably
refrain from flinging produce in his direction. Garden State depicts
self-realization in beautifully modulated baby steps.
The DVD includes a commentary track, a pile of deleted scenes, gag reel, and a
making-of featurette. Highly recommended.
Rain: Good for the garden.
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger





