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Parallel
Parking
Van
Sant flick adapts novel with dreamy precision
BY
MOLLY TEMPLETON
PARANOID
PARK: Written, directed and edited by Gus Van Sant. Based on the
novel by Blake Nelson. Cinematography, Christopher Doyle & Rain
Kathy Li. Starring Gabe Nevins, Dan Liu, Jake Miller, Taylor Momsen
and Lauren McKinney. IFC Films, 2008. R. 78 minutes. 
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| Alex
(Gabe Nevins) in Paranoid Park |
You can now add Gus Van Sant's Paranoid
Park to the small list of film adaptations that prove to be
better than the books on which they're based. The very interior
story of a teen skater dealing (or not dealing) with the ramifications
of one night's events is teased and shuffled from Blake Nelson's
average young adult novel, made contemplative and rich through careful
editing, the use of textured music and sound and numerous long,
lonely shots of Alex (Gabe Nevins) walking down isolated paths and
empty hallways. Alex, though a gangly, slow-moving teen, is in constant
motion, whether sitting on a skateboard, driving through downtown
Portland, shifting in a chair or leaning against a locker. He only
seems to hold still under the gaze of Detective Richard Liu (Dan
Liu), who's called all the skaters from one high school out of class.
There's been a death; a skateboard thrown into the river is involved.
Under Liu's gaze, Alex's eyes are as wide and guileless as ever,
but he pauses. There's nowhere to go, and no way not to think.
Nelson's early-'90s novel Girl was one of
those rare books that reflected a time and a kind of person without
messing up the details and thus ruining the effect. But Paranoid
Park felt awkward, off, like it was trying too hard to capture
an elusive authenticity. In Van Sant's film, the elements that rattled
the novel are turned to strengths. Alex's clumsy narration sounds
real, frustrated but unsure. Getting his story down on paper isn't
easy, and as he writes it all in a notebook, the story loops, turns
in on itself, revisiting scenes with the music or the dialogue turned
up or down and context slowly rolling in. Scenes of skaters at Paranoid
Park and elsewhere (shot in grainy Super-8) offer a dreamy contrast
with elegant, crisp images of Alex at the beach or at school, suggesting
a degree of freedom, of youthful exuberance, that Alex can't obtain
or articulate. The soundtrack — beautiful, familiar at times,
twitchy and strange at others — reflects the noise inside
Alex's head, a streaming video of thoughts and feelings for which
there is no pause button.
Boston Globe critic Wesley Morris described
the worlds in Van Sant's recent films (including the striking Elephant)
as "dreamt-up documentary," a nearly perfect phrase that captures
both the interior, reflective, uncertain position of Paranoid's
main character and the immersive clarity with which the film depicts
Alex and his world. There are no wrong notes; if anything, the entire
film, from its images of Portland (the gorgeous St. Johns Bridge,
the talent on display at Burnside Skatepark) to its dialogue between
high school friends, is almost too familiar, too real, like a teen-shot
mini-doc you'd stumble across on YouTube (though not a lot of YouTube
videos boast Christopher Doyle cinematography). Alex is angel-faced
and glassy-eyed, but he's not stupid; that blank face is a cover.
He's sitting back, riding it out, trying to silently understand
and explain with pencil and paper his place in the world, even though
he doesn't understand it — or how to deal with it —
just yet.
Paranoid Park opens Friday, April 4, at the Bijou.
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