Powder Movie Review
Powder Review
"Powder" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Victor SalvaProducer : Roger Birnbaum,Daniel Grodnik
Screenwiter : Victor Salva
Starring : Sean Patrick Flanery,Mary Steenburgen,Lance Henriksen,Jeff Goldblum
Once in awhile, Hollywood manages to surprise me with an uncompromising film
full of genuine emotion and enough to make you really think. Powder was
completely unexpected: it's easily one of the best films I've seen all year.
Something of an updated, hybridized E.T., Powder is the story of an albino
teenager (Sean Patrick Flanery) with strange powers of telekinesis, empathy,
and the ability to channel and absorb raw energy. As Powder says, "I'm not
like other people." That's putting it lightly.
His mother is struck by lightning before Powder's birth, and he is born
premature, an apparent freak of nature. His redneck father will have nothing
to do with him, and Powder ends up in his grandparent's basement until his
teens. When Powder finally emerges from hiding, the small Texas town has no
idea what to make of him, and typical of Southern paranoids, he is immediately
ostracized as a social deviant.
It soon becomes apparent that Powder is more than just an extremely pale kid,
as some subtle and not-so-subtle changes begin to take effect, and we find that
the outcasts among us can really be the greatest of people. Powder reflects
the deconstruction of all that's wrong with society, and the film manages to
hammer home its messages of peace, tolerance, and the cessation of fear without
ever becoming preachy.
Powder manages to take this kind of story to new and better heights than its
predecessors. Powder is a recluse, but unlike Nell, we can understand and
sympathize with him. Powder is the embodiment of virtue, but unlike Forrest
Gump, he is not just a victim of circumstance. And Powder is imbued with
supernatural ability, but unlike E.T., we can relate to his persecution on an
individual level.
Powder probably deserves a dozen Academy Award nominations, especially for
Flanery's jaw-dropping leading role. The makeup, which had to literally be
painted on, is almost surreal, and writer/director Victor Salva (who's done
virtually nothing before this) deserves my highest praise. The special effects
are groundbreaking, the camerawork (shot in and around Houston) is excellent,
and the supporting cast of Jeff Goldblum, Mary Steenburgen, and Lance Henriksen
is solid.
This probably isn't a film for the brain-dead hordes of moviegoers looking for
mindless eye candy. It requires a little commitment on the viewer's part, but
it's well worth it. In the end, Powder is a stirring example of what to do
right, not only in filmmaking, but in living one's life as well.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



