Our Song Movie Review
Our Song Review

"Our Song" Overview

Rating: NR
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Jim McKayProducer : Jim McKay,Paul Mezey,Diana E. Williams
Screenwiter : Jim McKay
Starring : Kerry Washington,Anna Simpson,Melissa Martinez
Our Song never struck me as being the greatest title for a movie. It brings to
mind some weepy tearjerker with an A-list diva/actress dying of terminal cancer
while her nursemaid looks on, wiping away a brittle tear. Rest assured, this
movie is far more substantial than the banal Hollywood weepie. Jim McKay's
indie follow-up to Girls Town is another socially aware portrait of adolescence
over a long, hot summer in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
Three close friends, Lanisha (Kerry Washington), Maria (Melissa Martinez) and
Jocelyn (Anna Simpson), listen to their favorite song on the radio ("Ooh,
child... things are gonna get easier... we'll walk in the rays of a beautiful
sun") and wonder what the future has in store. As they go through their
routines of shoplifting, flirting, grabbing a slice, or making plans to catch a
movie, their relationships inevitably change as young friendships always do.
McKay is well serviced by superb cinematographer Jim Denault (Boys Don't Cry),
who knows how to frame subtle moments with unobtrusive grace.
Clearly going for realism, McKay's script struggles to have it both ways.
Blessed with young actors who give unforced, natural performances, they're
stuck in after school special scenarios like a surprise pregnancy or selfishly
turning your back on your friends. No matter how many hand-held shots are
tossed in, there's too much emphasis on dramatic structure. A tragic third act
suicide (predicted by the three kids in advance, but not appearing in the way
you might expect) reveals the writer's hand, breaking the illusion that we're
bearing witness to reality. This is a movie.
Also, a slap on the wrist for McKay and his editor Alex Hall for falling into
that annoying Dancer in the Dark syndrome of presenting a dance/musical
performance in distracting fragments. The three girls are part of the Jackie
Robinson Steppers Marching Band, an amazing ensemble of urban kids who bring
bravado and panache to their hardcore drum and brass magic. They don't just
play music, they live it, blasting off with their bodies atwirl as they march
down Flatbush Avenue. It's a glorious sight, but we're never given enough time
to take it in.
The absence of master shots and infuriating cuts every four seconds never allow
the viewer ample opportunity to sit back and enjoy the performance. Too many
cinema tricks get in the way. In Robert Altman's The Player, Fred Ward bitches
about how movies have become simply "cut, cut, cut", referring to studio
released music video claptrap like Armageddon and Con Air. Our Song proves
that mentality has trickled down into the indie circuit as well. McKay seems
to have had so much good material to choose from that he decided to include
everything. C'mon, man -- I'm with you! I like your style! Give me a handful
of your meaningful images, and save the rest for the DVD specials!
For all that bitching, how many flicks do you see which dwell on participation
in a marching band? Or actually have honest-to-goodness communication between
parents and children where one isn't neatly pigeonholed as the bad guy? How
about showing urban blacks and Latinos who aren't capping each other? McKay's
Our Song is good enough that you wish it were stronger. Maybe he'll go back
and make a keen, observational documentary about the band -- I just hope he'll
hang back a little and trust his admirable performers to do some of the work
for him.
They sing their song.
Reviewer: Jeremiah Kipp





