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What's the matter with kids today?
Adolescent behaviour and awareness Is a topic
handled often in films. Summer of '42 does it with
poignant simplicity, Bless The Beasts, tragically, just to give two recent examples. Rip-Off, Don
Shebib's latest feature. currently showing at the New
Yorker. takes a light-hearted, comic approach to the
subject, with an undertone of sadness, but with very
uneven results. Shot mainly In Toronto, the story
revolves around the misadventures of four inept high
school friends (Dunky, Richie. Cooly and Steve) in
their graduating year. Anxious to discover the
delights of sexual pleasure. while being as "hip" as
possible, they make valiant attempts to impress
their school friends, especially the girls, with their
Individuality, virility and musical talents, with a
notable lack of success.
Dunky (Don Scardlno) picks up three girls at a rock
concert at City Hall, convincing them that he and the
others are also rock musicians and brings them
home (a house in the Don Mills suburban wasteland)
to listen to the four of them play. After an atrocious
session. the girls pick up and leave, frustrating the
boys' hopes of sexual involvement. As a way of
asserting their indiViduality, Dunky and Rich (Peter
Gross) smoke up before a Math class, only to be
found out by the teacher and Dunky is forced to stay
after class to write "I will not smoke in school" a
multitudinous number of times across the blackboard. That is essentially the role the four play:
friendly but inept bunglers.
After a series of such disasters, it develops that
Dunky's grandfather leaves him in his will 500 acres
of land near Timmins and the four decide on forming
a commune, with their minds definitely set on
bacchanalian orgies and final acceptance amongst
their peers as something different. The plan works
initially. They start attracting attention, become
celebrities at school. and Dunky succeeds in laying
the chick he has been chasing all year (Sue Helen
Petrie. who plays her part well with a mixture of coy
Innocence and haughty pride).
However, when they make it up to the inherited
land on their Easter vacation. they find a beaten-down shack with no water or heat. Unable to take
care of themselves and with a classic put-down by
two Indian hunters (possibly the funniest episode in
the film) they leave, disillusioned and irritable after
four days and return to Toronto. High school
graduation and grudging acceptance of the "realities" of life follow and the film ends.
I missed Sheblb's earlier effort Goin' Down The
Road but it seems to have achieved wide financial
success as well as four Canadian film awards. By all
accounts, this one will do even better, if only on the
financial side. Made on a strict budget, with a
skeleton crew of nine, Sheblb has put together a light,
inoffensive comedy that should appeal to the average
film goer. The first half holds together fairly well and
has some fine comic scenes, such as when Cooly
(Mike Kukulewich) finds himself picked up and
involved In the making of a blue movie with the
others listening at the door. But the film becomes
very episodic, almost to the point of boredom
towards the end; it doesn't have much depth and if
there is a point, it gets lost somewhere In the middle.
For two of the four boys, this is the first appearance in film. This tends towards a certain
naturalistic charm, but not very strong acting. Sheblb attempts some character development with a
confrontation between Dunky and his father. when
Dunky returns home from his "irresponsible" flight
for freedom and discovers that his father gets up at
6:30 in the morning to go to work to support the
family. The point is strained and if Dunky understands it, it is never made clear to the audience.
At one point Dunky tells the others that "we were
born too late, there's nothing left to discover". In
this type of film, the story is usually resolved by the
characters discovering something about themselves
and the world around them. At the end of this film,
however, nothing is made clear; all seems to have
passed by without making much impact on the four.
Certainly none is made on the audience. Maybe at
$2.SO a seat, the film itself is the rip-off.
By the way, there is a great short made in England
with the voices of Harold Pinter and Donald
Pleasance. If you're going to the flick, try and get
there on time. It's only five minutes in length and
well worth the effort.
Wyn Wise
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