Spring Forward Movie Review
Spring Forward Review
"Spring Forward" Overview

Rating: NR
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Tom GilroyProducer : Gill Holland,Jim McKay,Michael Stipe
Screenwiter : Tom Gilroy
Starring : Ned Beatty,Peri Gilpin,Ian Hart,Hallee Hirsh,Liev Schreiber,Campbell Scott,Lili Taylor
People will compare it to My Dinner with Andre. They will inevitably be
wrong. People will assume that it has something to do with Daylight Savings
Time. They, too, will be wrong. People will assume that just because Michael
Stipe executive produced this film, it will end up seeming like Being John
Malkovich. They, too, will be wrong. In point of fact Spring Forward is that
rare gem, a film with no brothers or sisters to deal with, no son to look down
upon or father to look up to. In the family tree of American cinema, the most
Spring Forward can have are a few distant cousins.
So what is Spring Forward? Simply put, Spring Forward is unique. It is not
unique in the sense of Being John Malkovich or Spectres of the Spectrum (a
uniqueness tainted with the surreal), but instead unique in the point of fact
that it a movie that has no plot, that has no centralized point or purpose…
that has nothing but characters. The characters are Murph (Ned Beatty) and
Paul (Schreiber), two city parks department workers in Connecticut who spend
one year talking while on the job.
The film starts in Spring, when Paul starts his first job after getting out of
prison. It ends a year later, when Murph leaves his job for retirement. Paul
is a bookworm. Murph has common sense. Paul is philosophical. Murph is
practical. The two characters are in almost every single way opposed to each
other, except for the fact that they are both incredibly charismatic. This
mutual charisma incites Paul and Murph to form a sort of paternal bond, and for
the rest of the movie, with sit in quiet contention and complete fascination as
we listen to some of the most brilliant conversation ever captured on screen.
Writer-director Tom Gilroy, an actor himself, created a true actor's haven. He
unleashed Schreiber and Beatty not only on the audiences, but on each other,
and the result is the kind of completely natural interaction that you run
across in real life. The dialogue is sharp, the direction on-target. But that
is not what makes Spring Forward incredible.
As a film, what makes Spring Forward so absolutely incredible is its ability to
challenge the audience. As I sit and think about the one small problem that
Spring Forward has, pacing (if the characters are ever silent, you begin to
glance at your watch), I realize that the fate of Spring Forward is not in it's
stars, or its director or producers, but in ourselves. Spring Forward is a
movie that, having no narrative, lives entirely in the gray. When you perceive
Spring Forward as slow, you lose sight of the fact that, in order for a movie
to be either slow or fast, it must be moving in the first place. Spring
Forward does not move. Spring Forward does not progress. Spring Forward
simply is.
And, provided you can let go of conventional thought long enough to enjoy
Spring Forward's just being there, Spring Forward simply is worth every second
you spend in the theatre.
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Review by James Brundage
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