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tom elce
Posted: Mon Apr 21, 2008 11:02 pm
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Son of Rambow (2008)
Rating: 3 / 5
Reviewed by Tom Elce
Director: Garth Jennings
Cast: Bill Milner, Will Poulter, Jules Sitruk, Jessica Stevenson, Neil
Dudgeon, Ed Westwick, Zofia Brooks, Eric Sykes, Charlie Thrift, Anna
Wing
MPAA Rating: PG-13
BBFC Rating: 12A

As much a love letter to filmmaking in general as it is to "First
Blood," which inspires two young boys to make a sorta-sequel despite
youthful ineptitude, "Son of Rambow" captures the joy of cinema and
also of childhood itself. Because it comes from a genuine place in
writer-director Garth Jennings' heart, then, it is disappointing to
watch his Sundance indie gradually succumb to routine sentiment over a
ninety-minute running time that otherwise flows smoothly. At the end
of the day it qualifies as a good film, though; A coming-of-age tale
that suffers hugely in comparison to masterpieces like 1986's "Stand
By Me" and 2005's "Mean Creek," "Sone of Rambow" feels a little safe
for the expectations set up by an interesting premise that
nevertheless feels like a hopeful, wholly pleasant meditation on
childhood, friendship and faith.

A sort-of cousin to the recent "Be Kind Rewind," the '80s-set "Son of
Rambow" is also a slightly better film, undeniably helped by the fact
it doesn't steal it's jokes from eight-year-old Nickelodeon
programmes. The jokes themselves come via the endearing-if-dictated
relationship by youngsters Will (Bill Milner) and Lee (Will Poulter),
the former a well-behaved student in a religious family and the latter
a foul-mouthed, thieving boy of the same age. Together they set out to
make a movie to be submitted by Lee to a film competition, dubbed "Son
of Rambow" by Will, whose artistic eyes have been opened further
following a viewing, courtesy of Lee's bootlegged copy, of "Rambo:
First Blood" and cause him to launch himself into a project that to
them appropriately seems like a work of visionary proportion, but to
older people strikes off as inept. Becoming involved over time in
their moviemaking venture is one Didier Revol (Jules Sitruk), a rad
French exchange student who himself sees something worth attempting in
Will and Lee's film when he becomes bored with his new habitat.

Wavering between the positively lovely moments - Will and Lee's first
filmmaking montage, a cameo from an old man as Rambo himself in their
film, and Didier's audition - and the forced - the inane gags
involving Didier before he becomes involved in the film - "Son of
Rambow" is an uneven British comedy that sometimes confuses charm for
Sundancey-quirk. Will and Lee's individual stories are thrown into the
mixture of their filmmaking togetherness and collide off of eachother.
Will's story, for example, is refreshing in how it shows a religious
upbringing in a positive light, a ray of hope in an otherwise
unspectacular existence that, for Will, nurtures his artistic drive
and helps him maintain a sunny outlook on life. That the flaws in his
religion are sometimes exposed is more a necessity than unwelcome
pointified argument.

The story of Lee's homelife, however, is as half-baked and contrived
as any other bad aspect of a coming-of-age film. One assumes the
inpiration behind the "broken home" plot he's straddled in is the bad-
boy image his character (who uncaringly steals from stores, school and
charity boxes), which feels more sour than sweet as it rolls around
and builds, one suspects, towards a resolution. Familial divide isn't
actually a reasoning behind kids going off the rails, which Garth
Jennings could have learned from as he isolates a small portion of his
audience.

The positives outweigh the negatives though in "Son of Rambow," which
inspires a notalgic feeling in anyone who has ever been a child with
it's appreciation of innocent childhood misadventures and gorgeous
summers that only ever seem to exist when you're a youngster. If too
much of the film hangs on slapstick and the analysis of a French
character whose existence is never really given full justification,
the film can be forgiven as a well-meaning walk through territory that
so many adults will have walked through when they themselves were kids
- if not in making a ramshackle movie than in some other gloriously
derivative thing they did in respone to something they saw which
changed their lives if only for a fleeting period.
 
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