The Wackness Movie Review
The Wackness Review

"The Wackness" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Jonathan LevineProducer : Keith Calder,Felipe Marino,Joe Neurauter
Screenwiter : Jonathan Levine
Starring Joshua Peck, Ben Kingsley, Olivia Thirlby, Famke Janssen
Shrouded in the haze of a Manhattan summer circa 1994 and Giuliani's great push for
a whitewashed New York, Jonathan Levine's very entertaining The Wackness takes the coming-of-age
story and attempts to give it a little history. The cultural touchstones of the '90s
are picked bare: Kurt Cobain's suicide, the release of Notorious B.I.G.'s Ready to
Die, Aaron Spelling's 90210, the turntable as the new musical lynchpin, and the ever-present
love of a good toke. But where most films of this nature seem to rely on a central
premise (e.g. My brother is dating my high school teacher who I have a crush on!
How will I deal?!), Levine's has a respectful restraint and an eye for mood that eschews
normal coming-of-age structure.
In Central Park, Luke Shapiro (Josh Peck of Nickelodeon's Drake + Josh) pushes an Italian
Ice cart filled with dime bags of herb, compliments of a Rastafarian dealer (a welcome
cameo by Method Man) who introduces the young dealer to a mix tape of Biggie. It's
not exactly clear how Shapiro begins to trade eighths of green for therapy sessions
with Dr. Jeffrey Squires (the ever-reliable Ben Kingsley) but from the moment the
relationship begins, it's clear the two were made for each other. That isn't to say
that friendship is the only thing that Shapiro finds alluring about the good doctor:
The teen entrepreneur has a major jones for Squires' stepdaughter Stephanie (Olivia
Thirlby in a bravura performance).
The Wackness won the Audience Award at this year's Sundance Film Festival, an unsurprising
accolade considering its pedigree. A star from Nickelodeon, the goofy sidekick from
Jason Reitman's Juno, the best illegal cash crop known to man, and a preference for
jams from the Golden Age of hip-hop: The Wackness has all the right moves for a story
that has already been filmed approximately 30 thousand times. But The Wackness is not dependent
on artistry either: From its cast to its linear narrative to its virginity jokes,
this is an audience film through-and-through.
As Dr. Squires seeks sanctuary from his frigid wife (Famke Janssen) with his new
friend and a groovy, Phish-lovin' neo-hippie (Mary Kate Olsen), Shapiro romances
Steph with lessons in drug-dealing, bottles of Crazy Horse and a mixtape of jams
by The Pharcyde and De La Soul. She repays him with a weekend at her family's beach house
in Fire Island, where she deflowers late-bloomer Luke after a few belts of whiskey.
Steph explains her relationship with Shapiro eloquently: "I'm all about the dopeness
but you're all about the wackness." A consummate modern girl, the doc's daughter wants
to have fun, and the fact that a few hearts might get broken is not entirely her
concern. Mr. Levine might be telling Luke's story, but he has a dedication to Steph
that cannot be ignored.
Levine is very aware of his time, but being a teenager in love sucks no matter what
year it is. What Levine gets across better than anything is the juxtaposition between
how seriously we take something as fickle as love at that age and the utter goofiness of the
world where we are told to propagate it. In this sense, I suspect many a teenage
boy will see Luke and notice a kindred spirit. But like any decent stoner, The Wackn
ess only has a passing interest in heartbreak and romance. Feeling good and snack food
are much higher on the to-do list.
Now that's wack.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin





