TAVERN REVIEW:
DOGTOWN
DOGTOWN, an independent film released to film festivals around the
United States in 1998-99, was written and directed by George
Hickenlooper, who has directed such films as "Sling Blade," "The Big
Brass Ring," "The Low Life," and the documentary "Hearts of Darkness:
A Filmmaker's Apocalypse." Hickenlooper was inspired, in part, by his
sudden celebrity in his hometown of St. Louis, Missouri after the
release of "Hearts of Darkness."
"Dogtown" is set in the town of Cuba, Missouri, which actually
exists. Torrance, California was used to stand in for Cuba during the
filming. They story revolves around Philip Van Horn (Trevor St. John)
who returns to Cuba thirteen years after he ran away from home just
after graduating from the local Catholic High School. Philip does
some narration at key points in the movie, and flashbacks tell some
of the story of his childhood in Cuba and his struggles in Los
Angeles after runnning away from Cuba. The central memory of his
childhood was how Dorothy Sternen, the most popular girl throughout
school, rejected and tormented him, along with the boy who would
become the All-American star of the basketball team, Ezra Good.
Karen Black, long-time Hollywood veteran, portrays Philip's
dysfunctional mother, who tries to relive her teenage years with the
leader of the garage rock band who "boards" at the house in Philip's
absence. Philip has returned home from Hollywood, where he has landed
a few bit parts and walk-ons, but spent more time living under
overpasses and, it is suggested, even prostituting himself on
occassions. Philip is surprised when some of the townspeople,
including the deputy sheriff, greet him as if he is a celebrity. The
deputy was a friend of Philip's in the old high school, and does
amateur Shakespeare productions.
As Philip visits old haunts, like the local ice cream stand, he
runs into old friends like "Blessed" William, the owner of the town's
cigar store. A veteran of World War II, William is missing both
hands, using prosthetic hooks. William is portrayed by Harold
Russell, the Academy Award winner of "The Best Days of Our Lives."
Russell's performance as "Blessed" William is memorable, conveying
the personality of the one character in the piece that is beloved by
the entire town.
Dorothy Sternen first appears to Philip at the ice cream stand.
She is with her two girlfriends from high school (Maureen McCormick
and Shawnee Smith) who work at the local beauty parlor, next to the
closed down theater. Dorothy was captain of the cheerleading squad
thirteen years before (1984) and later went on to compete in a Miss
Missouri contest. Voted Most Beautiful by her class, she is now
drifting aimlessly in her life as a fading star of Cuba. She is
mostly with Ezra, who remembers Philip Van Horn with only contempt,
which is the way Dorothy treated Philip during high school. Now,
after thirteen years and nothing but broken dreams, and an attempted
suicide, she is intrigued by Philip's Hollywood "success." Sitting
outside the ice cream stand, at their first reunion, Dorothy remarks
that she has never been inside Cuba's art museum even though she has
lived there all her life.
Philip and Dorothy become romantically entangled as Ezra Good
deteriorates in his bitterness over his failure during the high
school state basketball championship game thirteen years before. Ezra
had gotten drunk the night before, played miserably, and the school
was defeated. He blamed the black players on the other school's team,
and his racist views would get him in trouble with the drug dealers
to whom Ezra is heavily in debt.
Just before Philip is to leave for a part in New York, "Blessed"
William dies of a heart attack after breaking up a violent
confrontation between Ezra and one of his friends. The whole town
turns out for the funeral.
During a town celebration the night Philip returned, "Blessed"
William told Philip how he got his name. A young girl used to run to
his house whenever her drunken parents left her alone. He would hold
her as she cried, and said to him: "Bless you." A veteran at
William's funeral presents the folded American flag to Dorothy.
"Blessed" William's death crushes Dorothy. Shawnee Smith's character
tells Philip that Dorothy loved him more than anyone.
Ezra drinks and shoots baskets in the school playground during the
funeral, only to be badly beaten up by the black drug dealers he owes
money. Parked outside the art museum that night, Ezra tells Dorothy
he loves her. After a confrontation, Dorothy runs into the art musuem
and walks the galleries alone for the first time. From this point of
the movie to the end, we see the ability of Mary Stuart Masterson to
convey the emotions of a character to perfection. In the final scene,
we see her at her best, but I'll let the readers rent the video and
see it for themselves.
This movie is in a similar vein to "The Last Picture Show."
Hickenlooper even uses the image of the marquee of the closed theater
to communicate this. The last movie shown at the theater was 1984's
"Sixteen Candles," the John Hughes comedy that showed the traumas of
high school and its caste system. Some of the letters are missing
from the title, and one falls to the sidewalk during the movie. The
year 1984 was the year Philip, Dorothy, Ezra, and most of the main
characters graduated.
"Dogtown" is a story about how the traumas of childhood and
adolescence can maim the characters of people before they even get
started in life. While sad in many ways, the ending suggests that
healing, and redemption, are possible.
Shawnee Smith and Roy Cochrane were in a previous George
Hickenlooper film, "The Low Life." The Maureen McCormick referred to
in the review is the same Maureen McCormick who played Marcia Brady
in "The Brady Bunch."
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