Street Poet Movie Review
Street Poet Review
"Street Poet" Overview

Rating: NR
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : E. Paul EdwardsProducer : Alan Roberts
Screenwiter : E. Paul Edwards
Starring : C. Thomas Howell,Jeff Stearns,Tara D'Agostino,Fred Willard,Fred Williamson,Edward Albert
There was something about Street Poet, after popping the screener into my DVD
player, that made me not do what my instinct compelled me to do: To shut the
thing off after 10 minutes.
Maybe it was the bizarre promise of a movie starring both Fred Willard and C.
Thomas Howell. Maybe it was the cheeseball title. Maybe it was the very premise.
Here it is, in case you're piqued: Jake (Jeff Steans) is a scruffy regular at
the local poetry slam open mic night. When he's not working out his agression
on stage, he's romancing Marni (Tara D'Agostino). Only it turns out Marni has
HIV, and Jake decides winning the local $25,000 spoken word competition would
go a long way toward helping them out in her fight and, you know, in providing
food and stuff.
Jake can't win a five-man competition against a guy who raps about sex but
somehow he's favored to be a big contender in the slam, though the reigning
contender, David Settles (C. Thomas Howell), will be tough to beat. How will he
do it? Cue the 8 Mile soundtrack as Jake practices reciting with distractions
like car horns and seagulls, and tries to improvise on the spot (a key part of
the competition).
But Settles is a cheater: He's got a secret stash of awesome poetry to use, and
he's going to goad Jake into going "off book" to respond to it.
The awful richness of Street Poet, which tries so hard to be a good movie but
fails so magnificently at it, is hard to turn away from. No poetry cliche (and
indeed there are many) is left unturned, right down to Howell's soul patch and
the carefully crumpled pieces of paper which contestants read from. This all
comes to us courtesy of E. Paul Edwards, a writer for Knight Rider, 21 Jump
Street, and Baywatch Nights, here making his theatrical and directorial debut.
The movie is of course completely ridiculous. Not only is the setup trite and
hackneyed, the finale is ludicrous. Jake knows that Howell's Settles is
cheating -- as do others in the room -- but instead of simply pointing this out
to the judges, he improvises a weak "response" poem about plagiarism. And this
actually turns out to be Settles' big plan! Then there's the very premise of
the $25,000 poetry slam, which is held in a dingy L.A. bar and involves only a
handful of competitors. The large-scale poetry slam events, in reality. involve
regional teams of poets, not individuals. I can't find mention of the cash
prize any more, but in 1998 the grand prize was $2,000.
Much to my surprise, however, the poetry in Street Poet is actually pretty
good, the best being a bit from Howell about finding the point, walking miles
away, where he can no longer see a light at nighttime. I dig spoken word
(Spalding Gray is a personal hero), but the poetry on display in the film
really deserves a far better venue than this Karate Kid-esque cliche.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



