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What's It Like To Be An Outsider In America? Welcome To Xenia, Ohio.
GUMMO, THE DELIGHTFUL and scary first feature
by 23-year-old writer and director Harmony Korine, has little
in common with ordinary movies. There's not much of a plot, some
of the dialogue is inaudible, and it features very few professional
actors. It's these very differences that make Gummo powerful,
along with Korine's off-kilter, but strangely coherent sense of
form.
Gummo is set in Xenia, Ohio, a town that's been "hit
by a tornado," as Solomon, our glue-huffing narrator tells
us. The tornado seems more metaphorical than actual, though, and
the scenes of Gummo themselves spin out in a haphazard
whirlwind. Everyone in this Ohio town is disrupted, unrooted,
or damaged. It seems to be populated mostly by children and teenagers,
who lead boring lives punctuated by moments of trauma or cruelty.
Like Kids (which Korine also wrote), the young people in
Gummo don't seem to actually have parents. After the first
hour or so, a few parents do show up, accompanied by tales of
abuse, or violent outbursts, or relentless weirdness. It's even
more disturbing to see that the adults don't have control of their
lives either.
Gummo is a collection of scenes that only slowly add up
to a whole. Korine uses all sorts of formats--video, 35mm, Super-8--to
give the film a constantly shifting texture. At first, there's
a lot of video and Super-8 footage, and the beginning of Gummo
feels like a home movie of somebody's extremely dysfunctional
family where little boys fight and claim that the cops hate them
because they "get more pussy than they do." Eventually
the film settles into a form that is deeply influenced by documentary
filmmaking, especially cinema verité from the 1950s and
'60s. Different constellations of unhealthy people in squalid
surroundings live their lives in front of the camera, for no particular
reason. It's quite fascinating.
Korine used mostly non-actors and a Cassavetes-style, partially
improvised script to achieve this real-life feeling. One of the
main characters, a kid named Tummler, who, along with Solomon,
kills cats for a living (and sells them to a butcher shop), was
spotted by Korine on a drug-prevention episode of The Sally
Jesse Raphael Show. Other cast members were recruited around
Nashville, where the film was shot. As in documentaries, these
non-actors tend to be expressive in a way that doesn't rely on
dialogue. Korine's dialogue is fine, and often just weird, but
it's really what he manages to capture visually that makes Gummo
so arresting.
What he does capture, and what seems to hold the film together,
is a deep sense of being an outsider in America, even among the
strip malls and highways of the mainstream. The kids in Gummo
don't seem to belong anywhere, or to anyone; they're like the
mountains of trash piled up in the hallways of their houses. (To
achieve an incredible level of domestic squalor, Korine used real
locations in Nashville and manipulated them as little as possible.
In the scene where a little boy takes a picture off the wall and
a cloud of cockroaches swarms out, he just used a cockroach-infested
house.) There's an overwhelming sense that no one belongs in Xenia,
and that their displacement is permanent. It's a city of outcasts.
For this powerful mood, Korine owes a debt to the visual motifs
of a series of still photographers, beginning with Diane Arbus.
Interspersed between the antics of bored kids are interview-style
scenes with human oddities--albinos and retarded folks and dwarves--which
have some of the arresting strangeness and empathy of Arbus' photographs.
He also owes a debt to Larry Clarke (who directed Kids)
and Nan Golden, for an insider's view of a drugged underclass.
In the strangely saturated colors of Gummo (which required
special fluorescent lights), Korine seems especially influenced
by Golden.
It's interesting to be able to even pick out such influences
in a film, because so many directors today aren't very interested
in the visual possibilities of the medium; instead, they give
us talky movies that translate well onto video. One of the most
visceral scenes in Gummo has hardly any dialogue: It simply
shows Solomon in the bathtub, eating a plate of spaghetti while
his mother washes his hair. There is something so vividly wrong
about this, so counterintuitive, that it almost feels like we're
watching some taboo act. Gummo reminds us how powerful
pure imagery can be.
Gummo is playing exclusively at The Loft Cimena
(795-7777).
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