Little Athens Movie Review
Little Athens Review
"Little Athens" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Tom ZuberProducer : Josh Lawler,Chad Marshall,Larry Romano,Tom Zuber
Screenwiter : Jeff Zuber,Tom Zuber
Starring : John Patrick Amedori,Jorge Garcia,Shawn Hatosy,Michelle Horn,Tory Kittles,Erica Leerhsen,Rachel Miner,Kenny Morrison,Leonardo Nam,Michael Pena,DJ Qualls,Jill Ritchie,Eric Szmanda
Ensemble comedies featuring interlocking stories seem to be all the rage these
days, but boy does it take serious talent to pull off the intricate plotting
and careful structure of one of these films. Tom Zuber (whose prior film,
Lansdown, was nothing special either) either doesn't have the talent or the
patience for such a story. Instead, he turns in a tired retread of umpteen
"slackers do drugs, party, have sex, and get in trouble" movies which have
grown so popular and so tiresome in the indie filmmaking scene.
Little Athens is no Pulp Fiction. We've got a small-time drug dealing kid (John
Patrick Amedori) who steals a stash from his own dealer's dead cousin, a pair
of EMTs (Erica Leerhsen and Rachel Miner) each dealing with issues of love and
lust, and two slack-jawed losers (DJ Qualls and Jorge Garcia) who have just
been evicted.
Naturally, all players will come together in the end (at a house party in what
appears to be a horrible attempt at shooting day for night). Before that point,
not much will happen, alas. Everyone will spend a lot of time driving around
this little Arizona town, with perhaps a break for lunch. And, come to think of
it, not much will happen at the party either, until we reach a disturbingly
out-of-place finale that changes the tone of the film from one of just mild
contempt to something that's wholly off-putting.
Frankly, Athens' biggest failing is not that its story is so commonplace and
dull, but that its characters are so underdeveloped that it's difficult to tell
them apart. When we can discern who's who, it is mainly so we can determine who
we dislike more, but when a character's wardrobe is their most defining
feature, you've got big problems with your film. A couple of set pieces (like
Amedori's discovery of the dead cousin) elevate the film above one starsville,
but everything else is largely forgettable. Literally: Despite a box cover that
touts Radiohead on the film's soundtrack, all I can remember about the music in
the movie is the cacophonous and grating four-note violin ditty that plays over
and over again and permeates almost every scene.
Rarely have I been this happy to reach the closing credits of a DVD (where this
movie, of course, premiered commercially). That DVD includes a commentary track
and a making-of featurette.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





