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Eraserhead
Jack
Black gets magnetic
BY
JASON BLAIR
BE
KIND REWIND: Written and directed by Michel Gondry. Cinematography,
Ellen Kuras. Music, Jean-Michel Bernard. Starring Jack Black, Mos
Def, Danny Glover, Melonie Diaz and Mia Farrow. New Line Cinema,
2008. PG-13. 101 minutes. 
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| Jack
Black and Mos Def get shiny in Be Kind Rewind |
As if Jack Black's unruly body isn't by itself a
powerful contraceptive, imagine it flooded with a million volts
of electricity. Positively unattractive, you say? Not according
to Be Kind Rewind, the ridiculous film in which Jerry (played
by Black) turns magnetic while attempting to sabotage a power plant.
I won't go into how the monkey-wrenching comes about — there
are some mutterings about electromagnetic mind control, which are
as old as Gilligan's teeth — except to say that, in the aftermath,
you wouldn't want him handling your cassette tapes. Or your collection
of VHS tapes, which happens to be what Jerry's friend Mike (Mos
Def) handles for a living: Mike is the only employee at Be Kind
Rewind, a dilapidated all-VHS rental store in which Jerry spends
most of each day hanging about.
When Jerry erases the video collection at Be Kind
Rewind, it appears the store, like its inventory, is headed for
obsolescence. But the friends are undeterred. To save the store
from going broke — and to save the building from being demolished
— Jerry and Mike create low-tech re-enactments of beloved
films, a process they refer to as "sweding," the conceit being that
the films are from Sweden, thus justifying higher rental prices.
Their first effort is to swede the film Ghostbusters; to
the infectious beats of the Ray Parker Jr. song, Be Kind Rewind
briefly springs to life. The film, formerly tight, feels inspired
and improvisational. For their wardrobe, Jerry and Mike borrow clothing
from the cleaners. For supporting cast, they dress up Jerry's mute
co-mechanic. Requests for sweded films pour in. In a terrific, seamless
montage, we watch them re-imagine King Kong, Boyz in the
Hood and 2001: A Space Odyssey. New customers are required
to submit report cards and blood types. Jerry thinks he's going
to be a star.
When lawyers show up claiming copyright infringement,
director Michel Gondry (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind)
lays his cards on the table. It turns out he's holding too many.
(Jerry's reaction to the lawyers is "Bootleggers? We don't sell
boots.") I've deliberately spared you the film's numerous subplots,
which include Alzheimer's, a rival rental outlet and a fictional
jazz musician, because they only serve to cancel out the limited
charms of the film. The store's owner, Mr. Fletcher (Danny Glover)
is a cantankerous, unlikable fellow who still thinks he can convert
the store to DVD. Mos Def is earnest and sincere, with a proud humility
that hints at bigger roles to come. Jack Black, that agile manatee,
that beautiful contradiction, is the film's great near-miss. Although
occasionally he gets to spew portmanteau — "non-sequitary"
and "Shapeskearean" are highlights — I felt like I was stuck
in Orange County, a place I don't need to revisit.
Like a runaway satellite or a shaggy transvestite,
Be Kind Rewind is a confusion of messages and signals, few
of which hit their mark. The film is haphazard in concept and execution,
but the underlying weakness is the screenplay, which strives to
examine community and authenticity but, paradoxically, feels derivative
and inauthentic. What emerges from Gondry's indiscriminate script
is an attempt to re-create the inventiveness, the grounded whimsy,
of Eternal Sunshine, but that film, although superbly directed
by Gondry, was written by Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich).
Gondry's talents, first developed while creating groundbreaking
music videos, require collaboration to flourish. In order for the
whimsical-philosophical comedy film to work, it needs to be both
sweet and funny. Be Kind Rewind is very, very sweet.
Be
Kind Rewind is now playing at Cinemark.
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