George Washington Movie Review
George Washington Review

"George Washington" Overview

Rating: NR
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : David Gordon GreenProducer : David Gordon Green,Sacha W. Mueller,Lisa Muskat
Screenwiter : David Gordon Green
Starring : Candace Evanofski,Donald Holden,Curtis Cotton III,Eddie Rouse,Paul Schneider,Damian Jewan Lee,Rachael Handy,Jonathan Davidson,Janet Taylor
What astonishes is not that George Washington is a good film, it's that the
movie can tell such a powerful and complicated story in just 89 minutes. Its
length is a telling reminder that length does not equal gravity. In fact,
thinking over the last year or so of 2 1/2-hour-plus epics that never got
around to saying much of anything, I'm inclined to believe that the opposite is
true.
Recalling Days of Heaven and Sling Blade, George Washington takes us on a tour
of the Deep South, centering on a preteen African-American named George
(Richardson, not Washington -- played by Donald Holden), a boy whose skull
bones have never fully developed. With his soft head, he wears a helmet
wherever he goes and isn't allowed to go swimming, as the water would in some
way soak into his brain, causing extreme pain.
George and his friends live the idle lives of teens on a near-permanent summer
vacation, goofing off in the woods, breaking into abandoned buildings, stealing
cars, and what have you. One day, the adventures get a little rough, and one
of the children end up dead. Without really thinking about it, George and his
friends simply cover it up, staging an accident and leaving the body to rot
where it won't be found. And they go on with their lives.
But something changes within George, and he slowly begins assuming the role of
a superhero. After risking his own life to save a drowning boy, he eventually
dons a cape and dog-skin cap to direct traffic through his Podunk town.
George's life gets ever more mysterious, and still the film's title is not
explained.
It's a slow burn and harrowing ride through what would otherwise be a standard
coming of age flick. Partly scripted and partly improvised following David
Gordon Green's amazing direction (this is his first film), the junkyard
panoramas and organ music that punctuate the movie belie a sophistication you
wouldn't otherwise expect from a movie like this. George Washington will not
be a film for all tastes (and a cryptic, pedestrian title won't have 'em
rushing to the theaters), but the film is simply so urgent it's hard to
ignore. Worth looking around for.
Thankfully, the film is finally being released on DVD with the full Criterion
treatment, with commentary from Green, cinematographer Tim Orr, and actor Paul
Schneider that answers a lot of nagging questions you might have, plus a
handful of short films from Green's past, all exploring the George Washington
universe (amazingly, none of them are very good). Skip the shorts. Stick with
the movie. Highly recommended.
Here's to you, Mr. Washington.
|
Review by Christopher Null
|




