Lymelife Movie Review
Lymelife Review
"Lymelife" Overview

Rating: R
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Derick MartiniProducer : Alec Baldwin,Jonathan Cornick,Barbara De Fina,Steven Martini,Angela Somerville,Michele Tayler
Screenwiter : Derick Martini,Steven Martini
Starring : Alec Baldwin,Rory Culkin,Jill Hennessy,Timothy Hutton,Cynthia Nixon,Kieran Culkin,Emma Roberts
In Lymelife, Cynthia Nixon, as real estate agent Melissa Bragg in a New York
suburb in 1979, looks skinny and a shade skanky, like an aging out-of-town
version of a T. Rex groupie. And yet here she is in the real estate office
trying to sell parcels in a housing development to people with from other
countries. "It's the American Dream, Mr. Patel. On Long Island." Her boss,
Mickey Bartlett (Alec Baldwin, he of the reptilian gaze and surface-to-air
anger), is planning to become a millionaire in one year developing new homes in
a place he calls Bartletown (what else?). And since they are next-door
neighbors, the two are not so secretly engaged in schtupping one another.
Mickey's wife Brenda (Jill Hennessy) is trying to tune him out but the song is
getting monotonous. Melissa's husband Charlie (Timothy Hutton), spends his time
in cheap gray bargain suits, sweating profusely and lurking in the basement,
imaging that deer are trying to psychically commune with him. Charlie is slowly
slipping away (possibly) to the effects of Lyme disease. Or he may just be
another strung out sixties reject (he says the Lyme disease feels like
"perpetual acid trip").
Lyme disease in the Long Island burb is the horror malady of the moment, as
constructing new homes smack dab in the middle of the woods may be beautiful
but it is also nightmarish. Radio announcers point out that Lyme disease causes
psychiatric disturbances and severe mental disorders. Mothers weep at the
thought of their kids contracting it and duct-tape the kiddies' clothing
together to keep out the ticks. But if Lyme disease is the rampant contagion
that all fear, it must have seeped into the residents' skulls and infected
their brains. Because the only sensible parental character in Lymelife is
Charlie, and he is obviously nuts.
This is what Scott Bartlett (Rory Culkin) has to deal with. He is 15 years old,
gets beaten up by high school bullies, and pines (with Culkin's great moondog
eyes) for the Braggs' precocious and not-so-sweet 16-year-old Adrianna (Emma
Roberts).
Everything about the Bartletts and the Braggs is rapidly fraying around the
edges and getting ready to snap. Scott hopes for the best when his big brother
Jimmy (Kieran Culkin) comes back home, en route to fighting in the Falkland
Islands. Scott still sees his parents as his parents, but Jimmy has another
point of view, and his arrival launches the family dynamics into orbit. For
Scott, he manages to come of age not only sexually but also with the
realization that we all end up facing: that one's parents are actually deeply
troubled and sick souls.
First-time director Derick Martini jumps right into the fray headfirst with
reverse image cuts and an accurately rendered late-'70s feel for all these
greedy and self absorbed liopleurodons, crawling out of the muck of '60s
idealism and Me Decade hedonism, setting the stage for the malignant and
desperate times we now live in 30 years later. The mood is enhanced by a keen
selection of appropriate '70s song styles, from Bob Dylan to Frank Sinatra, the
music reflected in Rory Culkin's wide-eyed expressions of innocence and
experience.
Lymelife has a tone of desperate hilarity, and that desperation is tightened as
Scott wanders closer to Adrianna (culminating in an excruciatingly awkward and
funny scene of deflowering) as their families and his conscience explode.
Baldwin is in blood vessel-bursting mode in a loud and angry confrontation
scene with Brenda in their kitchen that sends him out to live in the model home
next door (when Scott tells his Dad that the new model house design looks like
the Millennium Falcon, Mickey states acidly, "You mean the Millennium Falcon in
a good way").
But in spite of all the acting chops (Baldwin and Hutton are brilliant) the
core of the film is Rory Culkin. Culkin lends the movie an almost silent film
intensity, and no matter happens to Scott in the film, you bleed right along
with him.
Lymelife, passionate and melancholy, captures the yearning and despair of
growing up in the late '70s at the beginning of the end of the American Dream
and the desire to, as Van Morrison sang about in a song of that era, "open up
the window, let me breathe." As Scott tells Adrianna at one point in the film,
"No matter where you go on Long Island, you can always hear the train."
Mind the poison oak.
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Review by Paul Brenner
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