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American Beauty

                                  (rating 10 out of 10)

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(1999, directed by Sam Mendes)

     Very few movies make me say Wow; this one wowed me truly.       Driving through suburbia you wouldn't notice it, but those dream homes and perfectly cut front lawns hide some of the most anguished lives that could be lead. Keeping up appearances, the modern American family suffers their repression, frustration and alienation; diseases of the soul which slowly yet thorougly consume them alive. It's all there, behind the "Welcome" mats and electric garage doors: A particular Hell which is fundamentally modern. American Beauty captures this hell and demonstrates it along with the best kept secret of the modern age, of any age: Life is beautiful and very much worth living. Doubtless, this is one of the best films of the year, deserving of all its praise and delivering on all of its hype. A tale at once funny and nightmarish; a tragedy in its finality positively uplifting.
    American Beauty has surprised me so much since I had no idea it was coming. I first heard of it by seeing an oversize poster of it at the local multiplex. In it, none other than Steven Spielberg is quoted as saying this film was one of the best he has seen in years (it's been reported that he read the script on a Saturday and on Monday morning he green-lighted the project proclaiming not a word be changed in the script) There was no prophetic trailer, no winning Sundance or Cannes film festival...and yes, it won the Toronto Film Festival yet that festival doesn't have the clout of the first two...it isn't even directed by a notable director, instead brought forth as the directorial debut of an English theater director named Sam Mendes. And what a directorial debut, perhaps one unlike any other--a true rarity, an instantaneous masterpiece.

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Kevin Spacey and Annette Bening attempt to make love in hell.


    But geez, what is this film about? Let me stop drooling for a while to tell you. Kevin Spacey is Lester Burnham, the film's narrator and head of the Burnham family, a family on a slow, scenic descent into hell. He begins by telling us he's going to die, a declaration of impending tragedy, yet what we don't expect is the moving revelations that will end the film in sheer captivating glory. He's the overrun father, trapped in an oppresive, demeaning corporate tomb at work and trapped in a suffocating, demoralizing domestic crypt at home. For relatives he has his wife Carolyn, Annette Bening, a bent caricature of a woman whose sole purpose is to succeed in the local real state market with brainwashing dose after dose of mind-altering inspirational self-help tapes. For a daughter, he has a quiet well of hate and angst named Jane, Thora Birch, whose pouty lips spell out beautifully how she wants her father dead, perhaps by a murder-for-hire deal. Lester is a man who's dead in life, a willing punching bag who has but checked out of his existence and let the show run itself, blowing him any which way it wants. That's until he mets her, Angela, and nothing is ever the same.
What sets American Beauty apart from the ordinary suburban drama is the execution of its harrowing premise. In the hands of a lesser director, this movie would have turned out a mess of overacting, cliches and tv-movie-of-the-week family-drama dynamics, but Mendes instead has stirred up a finely stewed soup with tuned performances from all the cast members and a clean, paceful cinematic style. No short-attention span editing, but sustained,tense-building editing. And oh, great dream sequences: Red rose petals are a recurrent theme in the film with one key sequence in which Lester imagines Angela(Mena Suvari) suspended on a sea of petals before him, beckoning him. A film which deserves to be seen more than once on the big screen, American Beauty acknowledges the telling qualities of images: Like the dancing plastic bag set asunder by the wind which Jane and oddly captivating Ricky Fitts watch for several minutes on his big screen TV. Like the breathtaking sight of Jane's teenage breasts when she flashes him from her bedroom window--Jane, the hidden beauty realizing Ricky or any teenage boy's most prescious fantasy, an honest, powerful erotic moment of cinema. I confess it--I got flustered right there and them, feeling the awe and longing that Ricky must have felt. Like the final aerial shot of the deceptively idyllic suburban neighborhood, revealing in the light of the events we've just seen a moment of true grace.
     Spacey's performance is perhaps the best of his career. We see the transformation from beast of burden to raging bull; from the loser that takes a disgracious pratfall before wife and daughter to the empowered man who smashes a dish against a wall making it clear that he won't be ignored, a point of concentrated rage. When Lester takes a job at a fast food joint flipping burgers, he's not only delivering a hilarious punchline but ironically taking charge of his life. Annette Bening's Carolyn is a finely honed character, an woman whose dense conceitedness is permanently hidden from herself--as Lester tries to seduce her on the living room couch she's more concerned about him spilling any beer on the furniture.
    Of note is the character of Ricky's father, a burn-out marine whose rage hides a buried, troubling secret which once revealed is the film's most ironic moment. I personally thought it hilarious, brilliant in its absurdity.
    The film's replete of lyrical, powerful images. Once it was over I had to clap, which in turn made the entire audience at The Senator theatre clap too. If it doesn't get the praise and revenues it deserves it would be a f**king shame. It's the film that every brainwashed suburbanite needs to see to be jolted back to the wonder that is life.

   
                                                                               Armando Valle

                                             Oct/20/99

     Armando Valle can be e-mailed at:[email protected]
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