Relevant elements: The music, Kevin Bacon really breaking out, the idea of a repressive town outlawing whatever it is the kids like these days
Why it resonated: I'd guess it was the music and overall energy
General comments on the film: The biggest surprise to me was just how small the stakes really were in this film. I knew the basic premise going in--city boy comes to a small town and ruffles feathers with his desire to dance--but I thought there would be a huge and life-threatening confrontation looming. Instead, the inspirational moment comes in a town council meeting (!?) when the young protagonist makes a Bible-quoting speech, except he has already lost in his attempt to overturn the ban on dancing. That is not the grandest battle ever filmed, especially since the loss is kind of moot anyway, as they just move the dance they're planning so it's a few feet past the township line. Even John Lithgow's stodgy reverend ends up being a fairly reasonable guy who stops people from burning books and is persuaded by gentle explanations that teenagers will do bad things whether or not you let them dance. How do you not let Lithgow breathe fire and chew scenery? Nobody ever wants a reasonable Lithgow.
And so we get the triumphant climax of the film: a bunch of yokels have a school dance...in a blizzard of glitter. That brings me to the most redeeming quality of this film: its unintentionally enjoyable goofiness. First off, what kind of a name is Ren? Also, the teenage deathwish scenes are just laughable, and the apparent epitome of the pernicious effects of rock music on youths is "Dancing in the Sheets"? And what about the classic and unexplainable scenes like Ren and his buddy laying out some exposition for us while practicing a high bar routine or Ren getting so angry at the town's narrowness that he just has to drive to a warehouse and dance it out (with a little more high bar action for good measure). The "romance" storyline is just as perplexing, as seen in one sequence in which Ren comforts Ariel after her boyfriend pummels her, only to chastise her for turning his fight into her own act of rebellion against her father, to which she responds by giving him a wooden music box and insisting that they finally kiss.
I must admit that the soundtrack is striking. It's basically like someone pressed the "scan" button on 1984. I had no idea that most of these songs were in this movie, except of course the title track, which popped up enough times that I started flashing back to "Moon River" in Breakfast at Tiffany's. Even the musical element seemed a bit odd to me, though, because the people in the town don't dress like they're from the '80s, and they seem equally enthusiastic about every song they hear, regardless of the widely divergent genres offered. In the end, I suppose the idea is that no matter what kind of music and no matter what people do to oppose it, the rhythm is gonna get you. And make you find the nearest industrial building in which to cavort.
No comments:
Post a Comment