Pay It Forward Movie Review
Pay It Forward Review

"Pay It Forward" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Mimi LederProducer : Peter Abrams,Robert Levy,Steven Reuther
Screenwiter : Leslie Dixon
Starring Kevin Spacey, Helen Hunt, Haley Joel Osment, Jay Mohr, James Caviezel, Jon Bon Jovi, Angie Dickinson
The very idea behind Pay It Forward -- that when someone does an enormous good
deed for you should pay it “forward” to three other, unsuspecting persons --
requires what is described in the film as “an extreme act of faith in the
goodness of people.”
It’s safe to say that your enjoyment of the film is bound by this same rule.
Dyed-in-the-wool film critics like myself have been down this road once or
twice before, and the enormous leap of faith it takes to convince oneself that,
deep down, even “bad” people are good makes me want to reach for my DVD of A
Clockwork Orange.
In a nutshell, Pay It Forward essentially gives us a new spin on the age-old
pyramid scheme, this time with an altruistic streak. The brainchild of young
Trevor McKinney (The Sixth Sense’s Haley Joel Osment), the PIF scheme is
hatched when his 7th grade Social Studies teacher Eugene Simonet (Kevin Spacey)
challenges the class to come up with a plan “to change the world.” While it
might have been a good idea to start by trying to fix up his alcoholic,
working-two-jobs, not-quite-a-hussie-but-almost mom (Helen Hunt), Trevor
figures he really can change the world with his plan.
Trevor launches Pay It Forward with gusto, helping out a homeless junkie (James
Cavaziel), some kid who keeps getting beat up at school, and even branching
into matchmaking as he tries to set up the burn-scarred and embittered Mr.
Simonet with Trevor’s trollop of a mother.
It’s at this point that we begin to wonder: Is Pay It Forward meant to be a
love story? Well, no. Actually, it’s a full-blown soap opera, complete with
rank alcoholism, spousal and child abuse, drug addiction, suicide,
homelessness, and everything else you get in the genre except a murderous evil
twin. As you might expect, the picture is positively drowning in sentiment, to
the point where it gets almost sickening.
The real driver for all this mushiness is that the film is extremely talky and,
for lack of a better word, preachy. Moments of greatness are punctuated by one
soliloquy after another. Sadly, this is a truly excellent story that is told
with exceptionally poor ability. Set in Vegas, Pay It Forward could easily
have had the power of a film like its brother-in-setting, Leaving Las Vegas,
which utilized the harsh dichotomy between bright, glitzy lights and the
baseness of the human condition perpetually on display there to drive its
message home. But it doesn’t. Pay It Forward takes the PG-13 way out and
muddles itself as a film for the entire family to watch, to bond over, and to
learn a thing or two about life.
To its credit, we do learn that thing or two about life from the strong moral
backbone of Pay It Forward, notably the importance of taking action instead of
just talking about doing something good. As a message movie, the film is
competent, and indeed it probably will play well to teen audiences if they can
sit through all the blah-blah-blah chattiness. But really, is it the best idea
to give us the one-two acting punch of both Jon Bon Jovi and Angie Dickenson to
drive the point home? Even Spacey and Hunt feel like they’re trying karmically
to redeem themselves for the misanthropy on display in (the far superior)
American Beauty and As Good As It Gets. (For which, of course, each won an
Academy Award, respectively.)
Ultimately, Pay It Forward will be 2000’s take on Forrest Gump. Like Gump,
Forward is utterly manipulative, a feel-so-good-you-have-to-cry movie that will
divide audiences into two camps: one that is swept away by the earnestness and
emotion of the story, and one that simply can’t stand the sappiness.
For what it’s worth, I managed to fall prey to neither side.
Be ready to pay.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





