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Passenger Side
Two brothers spend the day driving around Los Angeles county looking for the meaning of their lives, or cheap street drugs, depending on who you happen to believe.
Release : | 2009 |
Rating : | 5.8 |
Studio : | Corey Marr Productions Inc., |
Crew : | Director, Writer, |
Cast : | Adam Scott Joel Bissonnette Robin Tunney Gale Harold Mickey Cottrell |
Genre : | Drama Comedy |
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One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
It's Michael Brown (Adam Scott)'s 37th birthday. He gets a call from his brother Tobey for a ride. He gives a ride but Tobey won't tell him the reason. Michael keeps hinting at his birthday but Tobey is obviously clueless. They go on a long meandering journey through L.A. encountering sketchy characters and weird situations. Tobey comes clean that he's searching for his drug-addicted girlfriend Theresa.It's a lot of grumpy sarcastic indie banter. Adam Scott is usually good at it if he could have a comedian to bounce around the conversation. Joel Bissonnette is a perfectly good character actor but he provides no comedy. This has nothing truly funny. It's a lot of aimless complaining. It has a lot quirky without comedy. A transvestite jerking off in the car is sort of funny and Adam Scott tries his hardest. That's a small scene and it doesn't completely work anyways. It takes Michael a bit too long to challenge Tobey. This movie has lots of weird ideas but the comedy isn't there.
Adam Scott seems to end up in a lot of LA-buddy-wannabe-art-films, that feel like a bunch of stoned writers and glad-handing insiders decide to all get together and do that script that Kevin's buddy Steve was shopping around, OMG do you know Raymond oh he'd be perfect, oh yeah i was at the opening for their new house, his girlfriend used to walk my old roommate's dog, she did makeup on that last Carrey flick, right? blah blah. Sometimes you get a great result; sometimes you get drivel like this. Every scene seems to interrupt the flow, and then after a while you realize the gratuitous interruptions that add nothing, they are in fact the body of said flow. They seemed to have been hoping for a robust picaresque, but instead got a pointless chaos where nothing really belongs. I hope that that Pilates'd-out MILF found her breakout role in the unconvincing tranny prostitute, or maybe the well-rested model who was somehow supposed to be believable as a waste case. Adam Scott is his usual charming snoot, but to what end? There is no good reason to watch this movie. On top of all this, the music selection was probably the worst I've ever heard. Not a single track was worth even saving the rough sketch of, let alone burn to actual disc.Somewhere there's a backyard BBQ of earnest young LA acting bucks, and another let's-do- this vehicle is bubbling up. I hope it won't suck like this one.
As I watched this film, enjoying almost all of it, I thought of the kind of reactions it might elicit in others. True to form, they all seem to be present in these IMDb reviews. Yes, I agree- it's quirky as hell. But not off-puttingly so. Yes, it has some blunt sexual material but, again, not off-puttingly so. It's got some implied gore, but because it is essentially off-camera, it too is not offputting. There is no plot, so to speak. So what? It's a road movie. That's code for 'character-driven' and there are plenty of them here. The music is often terrific. It just seems to fit despite the recent tendency to use a song's lyrics to explain or underscore the point of a scene. That's a practice I find incredibly disrespectful to an audience and I'm sad to see it has entered the mainstream. It doesn't happen here.The scene with the transsexual hooker is great. It's not exploitive; it doesn't moralize. It manages to have humor and warmth. The porn-shoot scene was surprising and eye-opening. Are the people involved in making and producing porn really so empty-headed? I didn't expect that quickie-sex movies would draw a cast and crew of Rhodes scholars, but this was really jolting. Again, very naturally portrayed here. The "Tupperware party" comment was hilarious.This kind of movie is going to find its own niche audience. It reminded me of "Me and You and Everyone We Know," although I'm not sure I can tell you why. In any case PASSENGER SIDE worked for me. I wouldn't go out of my way to recommend it to anybody, but if they asked, I'd tell them to see it.
I thought the two brothers seemed to be more like gay lovers than brothers which destroyed the credibility of this sometimes affable sometimes sickening movie. Like a greeting card from the edge of what a human can tolerate in a day, it seems to deliver the goods and then backs away and starts doing cheap tricks, literally. Best avoid this ode to nowhere on a hot afternoon, it isn't that great to watch even as an art film. Sort of shades of a film Mat Damon did a few years ago about being lost in the desert, but this film has none of that other films drama. While the taxi driver character makes some valid points during the ride, the frame of the comments is to distracting for anything he says to have any real meaning. This film is to comedy/drama what Erasorhead is to action movies.