Rushmore Movie Review
Rushmore Review

"Rushmore" Overview

Rating: R
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Wes AndersonProducer : Barry Mendel,Paul Schiff
Screenwiter : Wes Anderson,Owen Wilson
Starring : Jason Schwartzman,Bill Murray,Olivia Williams,Brian Cox,Seymour Cassel,Mason Gamble
When I asked Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson what would be next after 1996’s
Bottle Rocket, they told me they were working on a number of projects about
“serious things.” I expressed skepticism then, and it turns out it was justly
founded. Rushmore is anything but serious, despite the Presidential-sounding
name.
So, what is Rushmore? Rushmore is a prestigious private school in Nowhere,
U.S.A. (actually Houston and Dallas, Texas), where its most vocal student, Max
(Schwartzman), is also its worst academically. Rushmore the movie follows Max
in his travails at school, where he falls hopelessly in love with teacher Miss
Cross (Williams, straight from The Postman and a haircut). Unwilling to accept
that the age differential is a concern, the 15-year old Max embarks on a grand
scheme to build an enormous aquarium as a symbol of affection. That he builds
it on the school’s baseball diamond is what gets him thrown out of Rushmore.
Lest I forget myself in failing to mention Oscar-worthy Bill Murray (with Billy
Bob Thornton, one of the only two Best Supporting Actors 1998 had) as the
wrench in Max’s master plan. Murray appears as one Mr. Blume, a rich
curmudgeon of an industrialist who at first funds Max’s plans, then tries to
steal Miss Cross away for himself.
Typing it out, it all sounds very conventional, but it’s not. Next to There's
Something About Mary, Rushmore is one of only a handful of solid, funny
comedies of 1998. And how funny it is! Anderson and Wilson’s writing is
spot-on yet surrealistic. The dialogue is bizarre and full of non-sequiturs,
yet wildly entertaining. The whole film plays as a near fantasy, where the
adults act like children, and the children act like adults. And no one’s the
wiser to the switch.
Rushmore is a truly American film that deserves to be seen by many, many
people. How many of those are going to “get it” remains a mystery.
Fans absolutely have to get the Rushmore Criterion DVD, which features
commentaries and some hilarious outtakes that defy description. Get it. Watch
it. Love it.
Hail to the king.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





