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Allen MacDonald
Director Terry Zwigoff’s new film, “Ghost World,” reflects the
personality of it’s protagonist: a sarcastic-shell protecting a sweet
core.
The tag line is “accentuate the negative,” and from the first frame
“Ghost World” stays true to its promise. Played with subtle grace by
Thora Birch (so superb in American Beauty), Enid is a high school
graduate floating aimlessly in the haze of of post-high school monotony.
The promise of excitement and anticipation of the “real world” has turned
out to be an anticlimactic lie.
Enid is struggling to come to terms with a new, adult world that her
sharp wit and acerbic tongue can no longer keep safely at bay. Enid and
best friend Rebecca (Scarlett Johanssen of “The Horse Whisperer”) have
long found comfort on the social fringe, proudly embracing their
rejection as a badge of honor while sneering, judging and criticizing
others as a way of hiding their own devastating insecurity and fear of
the world. In order to avoid making decisions and commitments, Enid takes
action with inaction.
Enid’s stagnation has put a strain on their friendship. While Rebecca
tries to make life easy on herself by dutifully pursuing a job and
apartment, Enid quietly rages against the mundane, refusing to conform,
but ending up nowhere in the process. They now seem to have only the past
in common, while the future threatens to rip their bond apart.
The most compelling story thread involves Enid’s relationship with
older man, Seymour (Steve Buscemi), a quiet loner who is a kindred spirit
to Enid, but is old enough to recognize there is nothing romantic about
being an aging eccentric who spends a large amount of time obsessing over
his rare record collection.
Zwigoff, whose last film was the documentary “Crumb,” doesn’t seem
comfortable staging fictional scenes. As a result, “Ghost World” has an
amateurish feel that most viewers will find grating. But like “Crumb,”
Zwigoff excels when he sets his characters loose to explore a world
inhabited by freaks and geeks.
Based on co-writer Daniel Clowes’ comic of the same name, the film
version of “Ghost World” relies little on plot, instead allowing the
characters to propel the story. Despite being bookended by a clunky
opening and closing, “Ghost World” succeeds by firing darts of aching
truth at the audience.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 28, is currently working toward his master’s degree
in screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
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