The Journey Movie Review
The Journey Review
"The Journey" Overview

Rating: NR
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Eric SaperstonProducer : Kathleen Kelly
Screenwiter : Michael Greer,Eric Saperston
Starring : Eric Saperston,Jimmy Carter,Max Cleland,Billy Crystal,Billy Frank,Jerry Garcia,Kathleen Kelly,Gert Koppel,Dave Murcott,Paige O'Brien,Jack O'Neill,Ann Richards,William Sessions,Henry Winkler
OK, here's the setup. Eric Saperston graduates from college, and rather than
getting a job, he decides to do the most cliched thing you can do: To buy a VW
bus and follow the Grateful Dead around the country.
Erk, scratch that. That's a movie that's been made before -- a lot, and never
very well.
Saperston decides then to create a "multimedia speaking tour" that he can take
to colleges. I don't know what a multimedia speaking tour is our exactly how
this would be displayed at these colleges, but it does involve a video camera
and a laptop -- which is purchased by funding from sponsorship money from UPS
and Coca-Cola.
The Journey chronicles Saperston's project as it's created -- and recreated,
and deconstructed -- from the breakdowns of the bus to the grilled cheese
sandwiches Eric sells to make gas money. Eventually Saperston comes up with
some interviews -- including ex-Texas governer Ann Richards and the estranged
father of one of Saperston's passengers/buddies.
This documentary bounces around from minor celeb to family histrionics to the
interpersonal relationships among Saperston and his skeleton crew (hey, the new
cameraperson can shoot tape and eat french fries simultaneously!). And
eventually -- at long last -- Saperston gets around to telling his story, which
is... what? It's that celebrities must know something because their
celebrities, right? The insights from folks like Henry Winkler and FBI director
Bill Sessions are largely the typical go-get-'em motivational claptrap that
I've heard umpteen times before in forced seminars at various jobs of the past
in dying companies. And strangely, these interviews take up maybe a quarter of
the movie, as Saperston continues to incessantly focus the movie on himself.
Saperston turns into youth mentor himself, dispensing aphorisms about
caterpillars and butterflies to kids he meets and one particularly memorable
sad sack: a guy who decides to quit his job at Kinko's. But frankly, I didn't
care about any of this and especially not one bit about Eric's attempt to get
his "project" on the big (or small) screen. Is that what "the journey" refers
to?
So for a film about helping kids to learn from their elders, what insight does
Saperston trying to get an agent and pitching his ideas to Disney have for us?
How does Eric firing his incompetent pal teach us what old people know? Perhaps
the most telling moment is Saperston's admission in one meeting that he can't
see people listening to this stuff for a whole hour, and that it'd be best as a
half-hour TV show. The Journey is 90 minutes long.
By the way, have you seen Anthem? Same deal. Of course, I'm a smug bastard who
thinks he knows everything... so it's safe to say The Journey is not for me.
Channel your inner teenager and maybe you'll get a kick out of it.
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Review by Christopher Null
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