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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Not so distant, but still distant
You Can Count on Me, written and directed by Kenneth
Lonergan
By David Walsh
20 December 2000
Use
this version to print
You Can Count on Me is a first feature film by screenwriter
and playwright Kenneth Lonergan. At the 2000 Sundance Film Festival
it was co-winner of the Grand Jury Prize and won the Waldo Salt
Screenwriting Award.
You Can Count on Me takes place in a small town in upstate
New York. In the opening sequence, a couple is killed in an automobile
crash, leaving their two young children orphans. Years later,
Sammy (Laura Linney) is a single mother still living in her hometown,
while her brother Terry (Mark Ruffalo) has led a more troubled
existence, drifting about, occasionally in minor scrapes with
the law. He pays a visit to his sister, for the purpose of borrowing
money to help out his pregnant girlfriend, and stays on longer
than intended. In the course of his stay, he develops a relationship
with his nephew. Sammy is torn between an affair with her new,
officious and married employer and an unsatisfying liaison with
a longtime boyfriend. In the end, through a crisis, brother and
sister reach some kind of painful understanding.
Lonergan's film is restrained and modest, self-consciously
so. This is the sort of work that is pleased with itself for making
the apparently surprising discovery that ordinary people
have drama in their lives. Too much of the film is taken up with
the effort to convince the spectator of its low-key, unassuming
quality. Why not simply take life as the starting point and begin?
I suppose, given the bombastic, overblown and empty character
of so many studio productions, Lonergan feels he has to make a
statement. However, the establishment of a different mood and
setting than one finds in ordinary stupid commercial films does
not solve all the director's problems, or ours.
There are likable and amusing moments in You Can Count on
Me, but it is the sort of film that feels less successful
and more manipulative the farther one steps away from it. The
dialogue suggests something of the contemporary off-Broadway theater,
or one branch of ita little mannered, deliberately small,
not so much genuinely ambiguous as amorphous, the work of intelligent,
sensitive people without a great deal to say.
From Lonergan's film we discover that identity is far more
unstable than it first appears. Sammy and Terry,
of course, are first names that can be used by either gender,
and, it turns out, the two personalities are somewhat interchangeable.
We learn that Sammy has a wild streak and that Terry can be reliable
and helpful. She wanders, at least morally, and he stays put with
his nephew. And so on. I'm not certain how illuminating this is.
And if their characters are not fixed, why the sudden reversion
to type (when Terry smashes up his situation by introducing Sammy's
son to his ne'er-do-well father)?
If one is mean-spirited enough to look closely, too many elements
of the film fail to hold water. Sammy's character never truly
coheres. She is first presented to us as a woman who lives an
entirely conventional life. Indeed much is made of that. Her brother,
in a casual remark, later refers to her torrid past. There's been
no hint of that side of her personality until the comment, which
she then obediently proceeds to justify. It's this sort of mediocre
literariness, the deed following the screenwriter's
word, that drags the film down and nearly always keeps life and
spontaneity at arm's length.
Sammy's son is relentlessly deadpan and her lover somewhat
absurd, a bit of a caricature. More than that, the film's relativismanyone
can act oddly and out of character at any given momentwhile
seemingly liberating, in my view, is actually limiting. That an
overbearing bank manager, a maddening stickler for rules and regulations,
attached to a highly pregnant wife, should suddenly take up with
his female loan officer and spend afternoons and evenings with
her at a local motel, seems unlikely. Such things happen, of course.
Life is contradictory. But do social and occupational categories
have any meaning?
The filmmaker wants to have his cake and eat it too. People
commit reckless, irrational acts here, which provide a certain
amount of dramatic mileage, but then they prove to be conventional
and predictable, after all. Where does that leave us? Moreover,
if someone acts out of character, wouldn't that be
the sort of activity an artist would want to investigate? Perhaps
such behavior might hint at other possibilities, at unhappiness,
at dissatisfaction. No, Lonergan allows the bank manager to return
to his old existence without his inner or outer life undergoing
any serious consideration. In reality, it was all just a device,
to get laughs, or produce that favorite American cinematic trait,
quirkiness. There's something cheap about that. There's
too much that's contrived and unconvincing about the whole work.
The brother-and-sister issue is also problematic. I didn't
find Sammy and Terry terribly convincing as siblings (although
both performers are fine). They simply seem like two oddly matched
adults, thrown together. Indeed the script almost seems to call
out for them to sleep together. That sort of tension is of course
possible between brother and sister, but it too would have to
be explained. Again, the filmmaker wants it both ways.
The two are rather arbitrarily made siblings, without any of
the implications of that connection fully explored, and then their
kinship, in the final scene, is made out to be everything. (There
is something truthful about the moment of Terry's departure, which
leaves Sammy gasping in pain, although there's nothing specific
to family relationships about that. He's leaving, she's staying,
and the thought of his not being there, the thought that he'll
be moving around, in other cities, distant from her, is agonizing.
I was moved by the pair at this point.) Somehow, despite a world
of difference, they are joined at the spiritual hip. Why? Lots
of brothers and sisters can't stand or feel nothing for one another.
Why should blood ties trump all the other elements? It seems a
weak argument, something one resorts to in place of deeper, more
penetrating analysis.
It's unfair to Lonergan, of course, but there's a comment in
the production notes that seems telling. The writer of the notes
has explained that cast and crew spent a month in and around the
town of Phoenicia, New York, in the Catskill Mountains, all of
two and a half hours from Manhattan. It seems that, due to the
mountainous terrain, cell phones were inoperable. The production
office and set had to communicate using a runner. Moreover, most
of the hotel rooms in the small town were not equipped with telephones.
The notes continue: The production had to adjust to these
rigors accordingly. Rigors. What can one say? Or, one might
agreeperhaps what most distinguishes You Can Count on
Me from conventional studio productions is the absence of
state-of-the-art telephone technology. Lonergan's film is not
so far removed from the more convulsive realities and complexities
of life as those more conventional works are, but it's still pretty
far.
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