The Pacific and Eddy Movie Review
The Pacific and Eddy Review
"The Pacific and Eddy" Overview

Rating: NR
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Matthew NourseProducer : Melanie A. Capacia,Matthew Nourse,Thomas J. Rasera
Screenwiter : Matthew Nourse
Starring : Ryan Donowho,Dominique Swain,Susan Highsmith,Mark Gregg,James Duval
I'm not typically a fan of "mumblecore," that emerging genre of low-budget
indie filmmaking that typically features 25-year-old slackers and hipsters
sitting around in small apartments and trading bedmates while they try to get
their band off the ground. The Pacific and Eddy is a slightly glossier
west-coast version of what has mainly been a Brooklyn phenomenon, and it's a
good example of what this type of movie can be when you blow in a little fresh
air and relieve a bit of the claustrophobia.
The star slacker here is Eddy (Ryan Donowho), a scruffy but good-looking and
charismatic mystery man who deserted his friends and disappeared a year ago
after a tragic "accident" took the life of his good friend. What actually
happened, and what Eddy's role in it was, is never explained, and while such
vagueness could be interpreted as manipulative, it actually works well here,
creating a backdrop of tension that never dissipates.
When Eddy suddenly shows up broke and looking for a couch to sleep on, his old
friend Barron (Mark Gregg) looks almost physically ill when he sees him and
very reluctantly lets him crash. "I can't believe you came back here, man," is
a typical refrain. Barron's dancer girlfriend, the icy Farah (Susan Highsmith),
is even more put off by the aimless Eddy, although you can easily see the
sexual sparks flying almost instantly. Rounding out the group is Chelsea
(Dominique Swain), a frustrated artist and former girlfriend of Eddy who has
moved on and is none too pleased to find Eddy coming around again, especially
since she has a new and sophisticated boyfriend (indie prince James Duval) on
her arm.
The small Southern California town (somewhere near San Diego) doesn't seem big
enough to contain all the agita that Eddy creates merely by returning. He
causes bar fights, screaming matches, breakups, and embarrassments merely by
walking the streets. Writer/director Matthew Nourse handles all this with a
delicate hand. Though Eddy doesn't really say much and has an "I'm just some
guy" attitude, he's also keenly aware of the vibes he's putting out and how
they are shaking up everyone around him. Donowho, whose career has consisted
mainly of dreamy teen roles, vaults into maturity by making the most of his
well-written part. Is Eddy shuffling down the street to the coffee shop, or is
he swaggering? Both, actually, and that's a tough trick to pull off. Swain is
equally good and like Donowho can be taken seriously as an adult actress here.
Good for her.
Which one's the Pacific?
Review (c) Rob Blackwelder



