waydowntown Movie Review
waydowntown Review

"waydowntown" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Gary BurnsProducer : Shirley Vercruysse
Screenwiter : Gary Burns
Starring : Fabrizio Filippo,Don McKellar,Marya Delver,Tammy Isbell,Gordon Currie,Tobias Godson,Jennifer Clement,James McBurney
“It’s sucking my will to live!” quipped Garth of Wayne’s World. Now, is that
corporate America’s fault, or our insistence of living in the closeted
environment of our careers instead of acknowledging the outside world? How
long could we go through the same corridors, talking to the same exact people,
day in and day out, without losing our mental faculties?
Tom (Fabrizio Filippo), Sandra (Marya Delver), Randy (Tobias Godson), and Curt
(Gordon Currie) are, possibly due to boredom, in the midst of a bet to see who
can survive the longest without leaving the corridors and buildings that
connect their downtown area. A month’s worth of salary is at stake to prove
their stubborn will surpasses their peers. What helps is that most of the area
near their office is connected to life’s necessities though passages that join
one building to the next. Hence, they are able to go home at night, eat food
at the mall, and so on without having to actually encounter the great urban
outdoors.
It’s day 24, and the claustrophobia is starting to wear on them all. Tom
accidentally gets himself entangled in a dysfunctional love tryst and keeps
experiencing delusions of flying and superheroes saluting him. Sandra is
addicted to perfume samples from magazines, suddenly scared of digesting
continually recycled air. Randy is heard from every now and then but doesn’t
get enough screen time for us to care about the challenge to his sanity. Curt,
who is engaged to a woman that won’t sleep with him until they tie the knot, is
disturbed by his lack of getting laid, putting thick moves on a vulnerable
co-worker.
The basic idea is silly, the characters are silly, and yet waydowntown is a
confection not easy to hate. It could be the skittish, most likely hand-held,
feel of the camera that punctuates the quick pace so that you never get bored,
no matter how mundane the conversation. Thankfully, the constant movement isn’
t jarring enough to generate the headaches that The Blair Witch Project did.
Perhaps it’s the amusing, recognizable quirks of those around you that come to
the surface when you’ve been around them for extended periods of time. Or that
it’s easy to point out the stupidity of each person on screen as their common
sense wanes in lieu of needing to escape. They are all average enough
caricatures that “acting” doesn’t quite seem the right word to describe them,
but it also keeps them interesting enough to follow.
Director Gary Burns wisely chose to shoot on digital video, which lends itself
well to the closed spaces while providing an eerie, sick coloration to every
scene no matter where it takes place. Once you get over the initially
ridiculous foundation the story is formed around, the jail-like quality of an
enormous mall does indeed seem oppressive.
waydowntown may not be an important movie, or even a good one, but it provides
a nice change of mindless pace in collision with the hot Oscar season currently
underway.
The DVD includes behind-the-scenes footage.
waystressedout.
Reviewer: Rachel Gordon



