Wildflowers
Director: Melissa Painter
Cast: Daryl Hannah, Clea DuVall, Eric Roberts, Tomas Arana, Richard Hillman, Eric Yetter, Robert Hass, John Doe
(Fries Film Group, 1999) Rated: R
by Sabadino Parker
PopMatters Film and Comics Critic
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Wilted and Subdued
Ah, the 1960s. A time when revolution stirred the air,
when it looked as though the United States might
change drastically. For the most part, it did, but we
take that for granted now, when the most heated public
debates concern political correctness and election
finance reform. In that context, it's perhaps no
surprise that the '60s have been romanticized,
commercialized, and distorted in media images like
Oliver Stone's The Doors: the era is remembered as
mind-expanding, socially conscious, and more inspiring
than today.
Occasionally, a movie comes along that attempts to
remember the '60s as a time like all others, with
competing ideologies, and both good and bad effects.
Such a film is Melissa Painter's feature debut,
Wildflowers, briefly released to theaters in 1999,
and now on video (and the Women's Entertainment cable
station). Starring Daryl Hannah as former flower child
Sabine and Clea DuVall as Cally, a stereotypically
troubled teen, the movie is set in 1985, over a decade
after the counter-cultural movement withered and many
of its participants converted to Reaganomics. While
Wildflowers might have been a relevant commentary on
the effects of the '60s, instead, it wilts on account
of what appears to be poor preparation, production,
and vision (a graduate of NYU's film school,
writer-director Painter shot the movie in only three
weeks).
The movie is set in Marin County, California, where
Cally lives with her dad (Tomas Arana) in a Sausalito
houseboat community, a groovy remnant of the communes
that flourished in the late '60s and early '70s. Cally
never knew her mother who, following the freewheeling
ethos of the hippie generation, abandoned her as a
baby. Her father, a laid-back though somewhat helpless
and irresponsible man, refuses to speak of the woman
he once loved. While Cally has relics -- various
pieces of artwork -- to remind her of her mom, she
also seeks to define herself apart from her parents.
By no small accident, a woman she encounters dancing
at a Blues Traveler concert captivates her, and Cally
is soon on the hunt to find out more about this
isolated artist, Sabine. She seeks the help of Jacob
(Eric Roberts), a drug dealer who knows Sabine and her
secret past, in order to unlock the mystery behind the
enigmatic woman.
Even though DuVall's performance comes closest to
carrying the movie, her sleepy recitation of her lines
is more distracting than compelling. Hannah is
particularly bad. Her Sabine is a bland stereotype of
the sensual, secluded artist, and her qualities that
attract Cally are hardly explored, thus making the
entire plot as flimsy as the Warren Report. Though she
is supposedly steeped in psychological frustration,
Sabine appears here as little more than a sex object,
a soft-spoken embodiment of every man's fantasy.
Former Poet Laureate of the United States Robert Hass
appears (unsurprisingly) as a poet with whom Sabine
lives during her stay in Cally's hometown: his poetry
is a breath of fresh air in an otherwise stifling
movie.
Although an occasionally charming tale of growing up,
rebellion, and coming to terms with the conflicts
between individualism and responsibility,
Wildflowers doesn't cut too deeply beneath the
surfaces of the characters, themes, or the cultural
contrasts between the '60s and '80s. The
cinematography is at times beautiful, providing an
almost documentary-like feel, but the overly mellow
pacing tends to drag, submerging what should be a
promising narrative of discovery into a languid one.
There is a lot of thematic potential for Painter's
film and, unfortunately, she tapped little of it. Much
could have been said about the ramifications of
"living free," especially when children and family are
brought into the picture (abandoning a young daughter
isn't a redeeming characteristic in any generation),
but such complex notions are barely raised in
Wildflowers. Why does Cally take such an unusual
interest in Sabine? We can conjecture, using all the
psycho-babble we want, but the film offers little in
the way of developed causes and effects.
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