Bold Boys with Big Brains
In a celebrated 1962 essay, film critic Manny Farber proposed
that a fundamental distinction can be drawn between what he
calls white elephant art and termite art. The former "treats
every inch of the screen and film as a potential area for
praiseworthy creativity," while the latter engages in "bug-like
immersion in a small area." Nevertheless, Farber does not value
one type of film over the other, but uses the descriptive terms
only to distinguish notable styles.
If the white elephant type of film dehydrates all distinction
out of its material, the other nails down isolated details
without glamorizing them or drawing attention to the process.
For Farber, Michelangelo Antonioni is the epitome of the white
elephant while Howard Hawks unassumingly pursues termite
ambitions.
Now, consider the often disparaged teen pic, particularly that
of 1980s vintage. Certainly not a genre known for its
"praiseworthy creativity," the seemingly endless parade of babes
and boys who populate these pictures appear entrapped in a state
of constant arousal and perpetual stupefaction. With few notable
exceptions -- like Amy Heckerling's Fast Times At Ridgemont
High (1982), John Hughes' The Breakfast Club (1985),
and Michael Dinner's Heaven Help Us (1985) -- it is hard
to think of this generation as much more than a simple-minded
combination of testosterone and tomfoolery. Some sophisticated
observers have argued that a Bahktinian form of the
carnivalesque redeems the best of these pictures. William Paul
provides the most compelling version of this position in
Laughing Screaming, yet I would argue that only a handful
of teen pics interrogate the parameters of taste in a satisfying
manner. More often than not, a fart joke ends up being simply a
matter of hot air.
None too many of the protagonists in '80s teen films could be
accused of being rocket scientists. In fact, any individual that
might be characterized as mentally proficient often comes in for
ritualized abuse, as if their very intelligence amounted to a
crime against nature. The Revenge of the Nerds films, for
example, made the possession of gray matter seem like a severe
genetic mutation with all the undesirable side effects
imaginable.
Real Genius, on the other hand, remains a welcome and
well-crafted exception to the rule. It takes place at Pacific
Tech, a fictional equivalent of MIT or Cal Tech. The egotistical
scientist Jerry Hathaway (William Atherton) recruits 16-year-old
whiz kid Mitch Taylor (Gabriel Jarret) in order to add his
expertise in laser research to Hathaway's assembly of research
students, led by the soon-to-graduate egghead Chris Knight (Val
Kilmer). Hathaway intends to have Mitch replace Chris as the
group's "number one stud" and to complete the technology that
will arm the military's clandestine Crossbow Project.
Mitch discovers Chris has unbuttoned his collar and recovered
his sense of balance within the high-pressure world of
governmentally funded research by engaging in sophisticated
pranks that undermine the institution's stuffiness.
In time the younger student loosens up under Chris's influence
and eventually loses his innocence when he discovers the
tactical uses Hathaway intends to make of their research. When
the professor absconds with their research, Chris and Mitch,
together with the hyperactive Jordan (Michelle Meyrink), fellow
student "Ick" Nagami (Mark Kamiyama) and campus hermit Lazslo
(Jonathon Gries), take their revenge on Hathaway by means of a
critical readjustment of the lasers they designed and a large
supply of popcorn.
Insofar as the parameters of the teen pic remain pretty firmly
in place, the elements that make Real Genius stand out
from the competition are the kind of termite-like details that
arise from Martha Coolidge's unflashy but astute direction and
the ingratiating performances from its leads. Coolidge had
renowned cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond (McCabe and Mrs.
Miller and Deliverance, among many others) shoot the
picture in wide-screen format -- not a customary ratio for
comedy. She does not use the added sense of space to separate
individuals or actions, but to keep the compositional focus
tightly on her characters and not on peripheral details -- and
thus her termite like ambitions.
Just so, many of the funniest gags come across as virtual
throwaways or are contained in montages, as when the students
and professor in one of Mitch's classes are gradually all
replaced by tape recorders. Coolidege rarely calls attention to
laughs through aggressive editing or over the top
characterizations. Even the butt of Chris and Mitch's ire,
Hathaway's student toady Kent (Robert Prescott), is vigorously
tormented but never made an obnoxious caricature.
The focus Coolidge maintains is helped by the affable
performances throughout. In only his second film, Kilmer makes
Chris a smart aleck, but never a smartass, who establishes a
believable friendship with his teenage roommate. Jarret never
made another film of any note, but the manner in which he
alternates between deadpan earnestness and a loopy sense of
absurdity is quite winning. The sole female character of note in
the story, Meyrink's Jordan, remains a unique creation. Her hair
in a Louis Brooks-like pageboy cut, Jordan talks a mile a
minute, never sleeps and expends her excess energy in random
projects like waxing the floors of her room. Silly as such
antics might seem, Coolidge does not permit her leads to descend
into smugness or self-righteousness. For all their animosity
toward Dr. Hathaway, they retain joy in the exercise of their
intelligence and the emotional rewards of their bonds as friends
and colleagues.
Whereas most teen films collapse into a mindless sequence of
witless one-liners and antiquated sight gags, Real Genius
remains effervescent and engaging. The tactical weapon sent
aloft by the Crossbow Project may crash and burn, but this
picture remains blissfully aloft, borne by engaging actors and a
warm heart.
12 July 2002