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Michael
Joshua Rowin on
Napoleon Dynamite
Napoleon Dynamite
’s advertising and word-of-mouth campaign had
me casting a wary eye at it as a more-Wes-Anderson-than-Wes-Anderson
geek-chic fest. Never underestimate the power
of low expectations: Napoleon Dynamite
may at times resort to Midwestern condescension
and little-guy-triumphs formulae, but its depiction
of gawky adolescence is dead on. Jon Heder’s portrayal
of Napoleon’s defensiveness is a spazzy palate
of “God!”s and sudden bursts of running. When,
toward film’s end, he unleashes his pent up frustration,
finally breaking into a dance routine as timed
to a perfectly-used Jamiroquai white-funk groove
in front of his classmates, it’s nothing short
of the most transcendent—albeit still hilarious—moment
in teen cinema. One of the film’s fanciful, unabashedly
implausible touches (was there ever a film more
grounded in the quotidian that so often left you
scratching your head for its sheer unreality,
and a few too many times, stupidity?), it inferred
onto both Heder and Napoleon instant cult status,
and their deserved moment in the sun.
But returning to what endeared me, as well as
so many others, to the film: I was surprised by
its faithfulness to the unheralded weirdness of
teen life, especially at a time when fidelity
to truth seems to strangely equal an obsession
with clichés of angst and misguidance (thirteen)
or the perverse (pretty much anything by Todd
Solondz). There’s nothing nearly as disingenuously
titillating here. Even the character of Uncle
Rico is unique: treating his longing for vanished
glory days so tenderly, without sentimentality
or mockery, the film at brief intervals achieves
a true sadness. Those involved in the making of
Napoleon Dynamite seem to have taken the
ridiculous, self-serious melodrama of high school
existence to heart, internalized it, and then
rearranged its tropes into a pageantry of universal
comic awkwardness. For instance, writers Jared
and Jerusha Hess perfectly nail adolescence’s
hyperbolic declarations with pitch-perfect dialogue:
“I already made, like, infinity of those at Scout
Camp”; “You have the worst reflexes of all time.”
Art director Curt Jensen’s eye for middle-class
decor (wood paneling, endless phone cords) also
brings a nostalgic sting of recognition. I’ve
never seen a film so accurately capture these
details of high school life. You once lived in
this world, too. |