The Acid House Movie Review
The Acid House Review

"The Acid House" Overview

Rating: R
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul McGuiganProducer : David Muir,Alex Usborne
Screenwiter : Irvine Welsh
Starring : Ewen Bremner,Martin Clunes,Arlene Cockburn,Michelle Gomez,Alex Howden,Stephen McCole,Gary McCormack,Jenny McCrindle
The late '90s should be cinematically remembered as the years of the new wave
drug movie. In the late '80s and the early '90s, the drug movie was nothing
more than a simple comic device… there was no meaning behind the cloud of pot
smoke produced by Cheech and Chong. Then, starting in 1996 with the British
smash Trainspotting, the drug movie suddenly took on a dual persona of both
cautionary tale and comedy of errors. Since Trainspotting, two truly exemplary
drug movies have come along… one American and one Scottish. The American is
the bizarre Gen-X foray into the surreal, Go. The Scottish is The Acid House.
Although only one part of The Acid House directly deals with LSD, the majority
of the movie feels as if it were written and directed the drug. Much like Go
gave an accurate portrayal of X, The Acid House gives an accurate portrayal of
the Super Mario… um… or so I heard.
The Acid House is derived from three stories in the collection by the same
title. The first story concerns a Scottish slacker who has the day from hell
and finds himself in a pub, where he meets God and is consequently turned into
a fly by him. After being turned into a fly, his day only gets more bizarre.
The second story deals with a nice guy who marries a pregnant whore. I will
not embellish on this, as the second story is the worst of the three and has
absolutely no place in an otherwise trippy and comic film. The third story
concerns yet another slacker who, after dropping acid and being struck by
lightning at the exact same time an ambulance containing a pregnant woman is
struck by lightning, switches places with a newborn baby.
The entire film is a complete trip for Americans to watch, as it is in Scottish
(or, rather English in thick Scottish dialect) with English subtitles. If you
have spent any time around Brits or Scots from Yorkshire on up, you don’t
actually need the subtitles. The same applies if you have watched
Trainspotting three or four times. However, you find out very quickly that,
although unnecessary to the dialogue in and of itself, the subtitles add a
special sense of the surreal to the picture. Director Paul McGuigan knows this
is not reality, and he wants to show it to you. To also display that this is
not reality, McGuigan uses every single trick in the bizarre cinematography
book… nature light, slow motion, fast motion, life from a flies’ eyes, x-rays…
you name it, it is probably used in this film.
For this the man deserves definite credit.
Although there haven’t been many films made that are part of the urban
surrealist movement (the literary movement that Trainspotting author Irvine
Welsh is a member of), this one by far shows the genre the best. Urban
Surrealism is taking the bizarre and trippy of life and making it into a form
of effortlessly hip cosmic joke. What separates this movement from America’s
Absurdist movement is simple: Urban Surrealism retains its tendencies towards
Beatnik expressionism. This is both the saving grace and the curse of Urban
Surrealism… that in the end there are morals (or at least messages) to the
stories they portray. The Acid House, in placing three stories (one
semi-moral, one completely moral, and one completely absurd), gives a general
impression as to what the movement of Urban Surrealism is designed to do.
The sad part of The Acid House is that, in portraying Urban Surrealism so well,
it manages to tack 40 useless minutes onto an otherwise perfect movie. The
result is a very great film with this one annoying spot in the middle where you
just want to leave the theatre.
But stick through the middle story… Ewen Bremner’s portrayal of a baby trapped
in the body of a grown man is worth it.
See Spud grope.
Reviewer: James Brundage





