Towelhead Movie Review
Towelhead Review

"Towelhead" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Alan BallProducer : Ted Hope,Alan Ball
Screenwiter : Alan Ball
Starring : Aaron Eckhart,Toni Collette,Maria Bello,Peter Macdissi,Summer Bishl
It's possible that Alan Ball will never quite grow up. And after seeing his directorial
debut Towelhead, people may never want him to -- those that stay until the final
credits roll, at least.
The advance word percolating out of festivals was that Ball's adaptation of Alicia
Erian's novel of sexual and racial angst in the suburbs during the Gulf War was just
shy of a disaster. Shocking, in-your-face, inappropriate, the rumors said, and not
in a good way. An indie film community, that just a few years ago would have embraced
this film as a brave slap in conformity's face, was now seeming to turn its collective
back. Some of the advance negativity was well-informed, at least about Ball. This
is a wildly manipulative and immature film, a sort of adolescent fever dream looking
to tick off as many taboos as possible. But amidst the campy twists and unbelievable
outbursts there can also be felt an indefinable honesty; something in far shorter
supply these days than mere outrage.
When it comes to outrage, Ball doesn't skimp, starting with his 13-year-old protagonist
Jasira (affectingly blank newcomer Summer Bishil) allowing her separated mother's
boyfriend to shave her. A predictably one-sided eruption follows not long after,
with Jasira's soured little despot of a mother (Maria Bello, whose vinegary appeal does
nothing but grow) bundling her off to her father, but not before assuring a weeping
Jasira that "this is all your fault."
With those kind words, a confused Jarsia shows up in the suburbs of Houston. There
she comes under the thumb of her persnickety Lebanese father Rifat (Peter Macdisi)
-- a persnickety and terrier-like NASA engineer whose mustache bristles at the slightest h
int of disruption to his order -- and the leering eye of the next-door neighbor,
Mr. Vuoso (Aaron Eckhart). It isn't long before Vuoso is taking advantage of Jasira's
budding interest in sex, showing her his porn magazines and getting abusively familiar. Al
though its title comes from one of the many racial epithets that Vuoso's boy sends
Jarsira's way, this is less a film about an outsider and discrimination and more
about the ticking time bomb that is Jasira's adolescence. The America in this film
is one that barrages young women with harshly charged sexuality and then punishes them
for responding.
Given the heavy-handed symbolism of the setting (Saddam Hussein is on everybody's
minds, and the loyalty of Arab-Americans is far from assumed), and its forthright
presentation of dysfunctional sexuality, Towelhead could well have been another suburbia-is-hell
exercise in quease. But in Ball's hands, the film becomes an improbably moving melodrama
that repeatedly veers in unexpected, and welcome, directions. Ball's film is adolescent
in its outlook and concerns, but wholeheartedly so. (It's sobering to think what might
have happened had Todd Solondz or Larry Clark gotten their sweaty little mitts on
it.)
Ball is nobody's great director, placing the camera too tentatively and using it
without a spark of dynamism. The film's threadbare budget certainly shows, but not
in ways that matter. In a sense, though, it's a more affecting take than Sam Mendes'
shooting of Ball's similarly juvenile American Beauty, which slathered gleam and gloss over the
script's emotional darkness; it may have been meant as irony but in effect it simply
made the pill go down easier. In American Beauty one could find refuge in Kevin Spacey's
comforting regression. But there's no real equivalent in Towelhead, where the Texas
sun is merciless, the houses are mean little ranches, privacy is a meaningless word,
and American flags snap overhead in the wind like sentinels. War and sex are thrumming
in the air, and there are simply no hiding places for the weak or undefended.
Aka Nothing Is Private.
Aren't you a little big to be a freshman?
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Review by Chris Barsanti
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