Thumbsucker Movie Review
Thumbsucker Review
"Thumbsucker" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Mike MillsProducer : Anthony Bregman,Bob Stephenson,Ted Hope
Screenwiter : Mike Mills
Starring : Lou Pucci,Tilda Swinton,Vince Vaughn,Vincent D’Onofrio,Keanu Reeves,Benjamin Bratt,Kelli Garner,Chase Offerle
For once, the film’s title is hardly a coy allusion or abstract metaphor –
Thumbsucker is a movie about, yes, a thumbsucker. More specifically, he’s a
17-year-old thumbsucker, a fact that hardly endears him to his schoolmates or
family. As would be expected in most any film about a socially awkward teen,
the story is ultimately about his maturation (or lack thereof) into the adult
world. What it ends up being, however, is more like the chronicle of some
hardworking parents stuck with a truly problematic son who’s about as unlikable
as it gets.
As parents Audrey and Mike Cobb, Tilda Swinton and Vincent D’Onofrio seem an
odd choice, but it’s an absolutely perfect one. Director Mike Mills may not
have the best ear for story or subject matter (the source novel by Walter Kirn,
should likely have been left on the unfilmed backlist) but he’s dead-on when it
comes to tone and casting. A pair of tired out working-class adults in a small
Northwest town who can’t quite accept being grownups, they have their two boys
call them by their first names. Everything around them betrays this hope, of
course, with Audrey working night shifts as a nurse at a celebrity drug
treatment clinic just to catch a glimpse of an addict TV star she’s got a
girlish crush on, and Mike as the beaten-down manager of a sporting goods store
unable to forget that but for an injury he could have gone pro.
Caught in their miasma of adult denial is Justin (Lou Pucci), drifting through
high school in a distracted daze, retreating to his room to suck his thumb. He
knows he’s not fitting in, has fumbled his one good shot at having a girlfriend
and can’t figure out why. His spiritual and flaky orthodontist wants to help
(if only to wean him off the thumb and save his teeth from further damage) and
uses hypnosis. But what really helps is the Ritalin Justin gets prescribed,
turning him into a high-octane member of the debate club. Of course, as a
fellow debater reminds him, “You know that stuff’s just speed, right?” And so
we can see that Justin’s headed for a crash.
Not that the audience is likely to care too much, because even Audrey – as
accepting of Justin’s forlorn ineptitude as Mike is infuriated by it – says of
him at one point, “He can be such a little shit sometimes.” The film seems
aware of this and doesn’t try to deny Justin’s Me-Me-Me selfishness, even going
out of its way to give some of the better moments to the adults in his life.
Thumbsucker could even go down in history as possibly the first film from a
dysfunctional teen’s point of view that can actually make you sympathize with
the parents. Of course, having Swinton’s soulful coolness and D’Onofrio’s
buzzcut bottled-up frustration doesn’t hurt, and casting a deliriously Zen
Keanu Reeves as the orthodontist deserves applause all on its own.
Thumbsucker has great acting to spare, there is no doubt, even bringing in
Vince Vaughn to do a rare dramatic turn as Justin’s suppressed and snappy
debate teacher (“this isn’t agree club”). But no matter how hard Pucci tries
with his Justin, hiding big-eyed frightened animal-like behind artfully
swinging bands before effortlessly shifting into a Ritalin-stoked Type-A
bastard, there’s not much he can do with a character who inspires little
sympathy, and worse, less interest. Mills knows how to put a film together,
there’s little doubt of that. But these skills and cast would have been better
served in a story of just slightly more import. Less Polyphonic Spree on the
soundtrack would have been nice, too.
See if you can get your lips around that!
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti



