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Rushmore review
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[Film] Rushmore

I liked this film as much as The Royal Tenenbaums, which was also directed and written by Wes Anderson (co-written with Owen Wilson). Some people might not appreciate the quirkiness of his films, but I enjoy Anderson (and to the same extend Wilson's) dark sense of humour and his skewed yet strangely appealing and profound view of life. As in The Royal Tenenbaums, the characters in this film are quirky, interesting and somewhat disturbed; they're obsessive, disillusioned and sometimes downright unlikable. However, they're also human and capable of growth.

Anderson & Wilson brought to life the idealistic & obsessive teenager Max Fischer (Jason Schwartzman) and his middle-aged counterpart Herman Blume (Bill Murray). These two characters form a strange bond through their connection to Rushmore. In a way, Blume's disillusion about life fits in nicely with Max's delusion of it. They're both children in different ways. Max cares and does too much (the classic overachiever) while Blume doesn't care enough or does just barely enough.

In the movie, the three main characters, Max, Herman & Rosemary (Olivia Williams) are all obsessed about something. They're bogged down in their own dramas. It reminds me of my favourite quote from Adaptation:

There are too many ideas and too many people. And too many directions to go. I was starting to believe that the reason it matters to care passionately about something, is that is whittles the world down to a more manageable size. - Susan Orlean

Underneath the quirkiness and the insanity of their actions, the characters are plagued with uncertainties and a feeling of losing control over their lives. What I like about the movie is how subtle the motivations behind the actions of the characters are. Anderson never tries to make his movies angsty for angsty's sake. In real life, people don't act like Shakespearean characters who always tell you how they feel and why they act the way they do. Our actions speak who we are. Sure, Anderson's characters are somewhat exaggerated, but they feel human. In Anderson's world, life is comically grotesque and often bitter-sweet, but always hopeful. Such is the charm of life and Rushmore.

8/10
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Added by Hibiscus
16 years ago on 2 January 2008 08:01