Jesus' Son Movie Review
Jesus' Son Review

"Jesus' Son" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Alison MacleanProducer : Elizabeth Cuthrell,Lydia Dean-Pilcher,David Urrutia
Screenwiter : Elizabeth Cuthrell,Oren Moverman,David Urrutia
Starring : Billy Crudup,Samantha Morton,Denis Leary,Jack Black,Will Patton,Greg Germann,Holly Hunter,Dennis Hopper
It’s a typical day in the life of rambling junkie F*ckhead, whom we’ll call FH
for the purposes of this review. He just broke up with his on-again, off-again
heroin buddy and girlfriend, Michelle, stole a car, drove to the local bar and
is getting wasted with his buddy, Wayne, a burned out husk of a human being and
card carrying member of the Undead Drunks Club.
After several shots of rotgut to wash down the uppers, downers and endless fuel
of smack, bleary eyed Wayne asks FH if he wants to make a couple bucks to pay
for the drinks they’re gonna have later (we realize it’s only mid-afternoon by
this point.) They meander off to a nearby house and proceed to rip the copper
wiring out of the walls. “Yep,” Wayne chuckles. “This ought to be worth forty
bucks – enough to get drunk tonight. Heh heh.”
This is only ten minutes of Alison Maclean’s whimsical junkie movie, Jesus’
Son, which drifts from one anecdote to the next. Our unreliable, rambling
narrator, FH (brilliantly acted by Billy Crudup), regards everything he sees
with a bemused detachment, whether it be munching on his cornflakes while
Michelle (Samantha Morton) shoots up after sex, or taking a part time job as a
hospital orderly in the emergency room among fellow pill popping losers who
raid the cabinets, desperate for a cheap score.
We’re given a series of episodes in FH’s life in the mid-‘70s, and unlike most
films which dwell in this sort of seedy world, it never judges the lives of its
main characters. In fact, FH invites us to laugh at their pathetic little lives
holed up in cheap hotel rooms, passing the time with sex and drugs, or telling
long stories about their failed love lives and immediate goals of getting
wasted.
The characters are lovable without being “quirky”, meaning they ring true. FH
encounters several personalities throughout, and each actor is given the
opportunity to shine in honest, lived in performances. Wayne, the guy who rips
the copper wiring out of the walls of what may or may not be his house, is
played by a surprisingly restrained Denis Leary, for whom most of the fire has
gone out. Underneath a sad sack moustache, Leary gives his most haunted
performance.
Just as good is Jack Black, fresh from his acclaim in High Fidelity, as
Georgie, who drives around with FH popping pills as they seek a place to camp
out in the open air one night. He’s given the most surprising scene in the
movie after they run over a rabbit on the road, and he whips out his knife
saying that they will feast tonight. This unseemly behavior transforms into
something profound and miraculous in one of the film’s first of many small
epiphanies.
While the film doesn’t follow the traditional rules of storytelling (feeling
more like a series of faded super-8 films strung together on a string), the
offbeat themes and sketches offer glimpses into a world. Maclean is attentive
to the look of their ragtag, colorful clothes (including striped yellow
underwear or natty brown leather coats two sizes too big), the gray and empty
rooms with filthy beds and noisy springs – maybe a TV playing in the background
if they haven’t sold it yet, and the dreamy cinematography of Adam Kimmel which
purposefully allows certain images to blur or shift in and out of focus like
memories.
The screenplay (and assured editing) move backward and forward in time as FH
tries to sift through his thoughts about Michelle, often going on long tangents
as he stumbles to keep on track. Thankfully, he manages to take exciting
detours with Leary, Black, Holly Hunter and a hospital encounter with Dennis
Hopper, of course, playing a cheerfully grumpy addict who offers a descriptive
and strange tale of a former wife who shot him in the face years ago.
Billy Crudup takes center stage in the film playing a passive character with
graceful strokes. He’s always present in his scenes with the other actors,
listening, eyes roving around nervously and breaking out into his infectious
grin. Maclean found the perfect actor to embody this lovably clumsy sod who’s
got one foot on the highway and another in a puddle. While it ultimately doesn’
t amount to more than an amusing shaggy dog story, Jesus’ Son is simply two
hours in the life of a F*ckhead, with an eye for details and nuance that
reveals the underlying humor beneath the lives of the sad, the tattered, the
broken and the pathetic.
'nuff said!
Reviewer: Jeremiah Kipp





