While Dean shrugs his way through high school wearing
a psychic cloak of invisibility, his best friend Troy—the
school's leading drug dealer—throws the community's carefully
maintained psychotherapeutic balance into disarray when he hangs
himself during one of his mother's pool parties. At school, in an
effort to get their hands on Troy's stash, Dean's classmates Billy
(Justin Chatwin), Crystal (Camilla Belle), and Lee (Lou Taylor Pucci)
plot a kidnapping scheme: they'll abduct Dean's younger brother,
Charlie (Rory Culkin), and hold him for ransom in exchange for Dean
retrieving Troy's pills. Only, the hapless gang kidnaps the wrong
boy, snatching Charley Bratley (Thomas Curtis) instead. Son of divorced
parents—police officer Lou Bratley (John Heard), and interior
decorator Terri (Rita Wilson)—Charley's disappearance goes
unnoticed by his mother, who is too consumed with the planning of
her elaborate second wedding to town mayor Michael Ebbs (Ralph Fiennes),
to realize her son has gone missing.
As these characters careen through their white-picket-fence
world, each pursuing some dream, some ideal, some panacea they believe
will make them happy—be it prescription or illicit drugs,
vitamin supplements, the perfect body, a fairy tale wedding, self-help
books, or New Age mysticism—the fractured and fractious quality
of life in American suburbia is rendered with crystalline precision.
The kids and adults of Hillside live their lives
entirely separately—like two opposing camps—a mournful
divide played out in a visual scheme of sun-dappled, hallucinatory
realism. Deciding both whether and how to negotiate these two worlds
is Dean, a character whose very name purposely invokes the entire
history of troubled teenage movie outsiders, from James Dean in
Rebel Without A Cause to Christian Slater's J.D. in Heathers. .
.
. . . And everywhere there is "The Chumscrubber."
A totemic pop culture presence that prowls his own post-apocalyptic
landscape peopled with subhuman demons and freaks, the ubiquitous
"Chumscrubber" bubbles up in television cartoons, in violent
video games, on posters and T-shirts and stickers and rearview mirrors
as. . . An embodiment of teen rage? A manifestation of the town's
repression? A shadow vision of its collective unconscious?
"Don't ignore me," myriad characters say
to one another over the course of The Chumscrubber, and that echoing
line of dialogue—that plea—becomes a mantra in this
film about American disconnection, be it generational, familial,
cultural, or pharmaceutical. Only one character, Mayor Ebbs, holds
steadfast to the conviction that everything connects. After suffering
a freak head injury, Mayor Ebbs comes to believe that something
truly profound is scattered beneath the surface of suburban banality,
a belief borne out in The Chumscrubber's beautiful and hard-won
conclusion.
As the teens play out their botched kidnapping,
Troy's devastated mother (Glenn Close) plans a memorial service,
and Terri and Michael prepare for their wedding, the parallel story
strands converge in the film's immensely satisfying culmination.
Shakespeare contended that comedies end in weddings and tragedies
end in funerals: in a perfect expression of The Chumscrubber's tricky
tonal highwire act—a razor's edge balance of comedy and drama—this
remarkably assured debut has the good grace and audacity to end
with both, occurring simultaneously, on a perfectly manicured cul-de-sac.
Everything connects.
At first glance perhaps evoking the despair-beneath-the-hedges
genre, The Chumscrubber possesses a wondrous sense of American magic
realism uniquely its own. First-time director Arie Posin is also
exceedingly generous toward his characters; investing each of the
players in his large cast with a novelistic sense of empathy, ambiguity,
and complexity. A work of brutal, uncompromising honesty The Chumscrubber
is also, somehow, miraculously devoid of vitriol.
Richly layered, thematically provocative, filled
with epiphanic visual moments and a haunting original score by James
Horner, stocked with the deepest cast bench of any recent ensemble
film, The Chumscrubber announces the arrival of a major film artist.