For some, the joys of
being a teenager include excelling at sports, having a girlfriend or boyfriend,
being part of a close circle of friends, or just having fun. For others,
there is only the constant feeling of being an outsider looking in. For
some, even the thought of getting out of bed in the morning to go to school
is filled with dread. Case in point - Hal Hefner, a fifteen year old attending
Plainsboro High School in New Jersey, who is trying to make sense of growing
up but is burdened by a stutter so debilitating that he cannot even tell
the cafeteria worker at school that he wants pizza instead of fish. Rocket
Science, the second feature by Jeffrey Blitz (Spellbound), who overcame
his own stuttering disability, is a teen comedy that poignantly captures
the painful loneliness of adolescence.
While on paper Rocket
Science sounds like other coming of age films such as Election and Rushmore,
it manages to capture something unique and very special about being a teenager
without having to rely on grossness, stereotypes, or implausible situations.
Brilliantly played by Vancouver actor Reece Thompson, Hal’s sweetness and
innocence is totally captivating and we identify with his pain and root
for him to succeed. His family support, however, is virtually nonexistent.
His brother Earl (Vincent Piazza) is a compulsive thief and bully who calls
him by girls’ names, his father has moved out of the house and his mother
(Lizbeth Bartlett) has a Korean boyfriend, a Small Claims judge, (Steve
Park) who laughs inappropriately and whose son Heston (Aaron Yu), a bisexual,
shows an unusual amount of interest in him.
Hal has a speech therapist,
Mr. Lewinsky (Maury Ginsberg), but he is so incompetent that he tells him
that he wishes Hal was hyperactive so he would know how to treat him. Under
these circumstances, the last place he would want to be is on the high
school debating team, a collection of driven, super-confident word magicians
who can speak with authority at breakneck speed on both sides of an issue.
Surprisingly however, Hal is recruited by top debater Ginny Ryerson (Anna
Kendrick) to be her debate partner after her former partner Ben Wekselbaum
(Nicholas D’Agosto) went blank at last year’s championship match.
Ginny, a charming but
overly aggressive super student, tells Hal that “deformed people” make
good competitors because they have so much anger to express. Hal’s first
inclination is to say no but he is so taken with Ginny and flattered that
someone could see some possibility in him that he accepts. Giving it the
old high school try, he stumbles badly both in pursuing his romance and
in debating the subject of sexual abstinence in high school, so badly in
fact that he often has to hide in the janitor’s closet from embarrassment.
Mr. Lewinsky advises Hal
to try singing the words of the debate to the tune of Battle Hymn of the
Republic, or speaking with a foreign accent and he does both with hilarious
effect. Partly out of revenge and partly out of desperation, he turns to
failed debater Ben Wekselbaum, now working in Trenton in a cleaners, to
be his new partner after Ginny transfers to a different school. The ending
is ripe for the big debate in which all the pieces fit neatly together
but Blitz does not go there. Instead he relies on the inner strength of
the characters to see them through, not on a contrived narrative.
While there are some predictably
oddball characters like Philosophy major Lionel (Jonah Hill), pint-sized
Josh (Lewis Garrles) who spies on Ginny for him (and models her bra that
he has stolen), and an older couple who practice the Kama Sutra and play
Violent Femmes "Blister In The Sun" duets on the cello and piano, Rocket
Science has few false notes. It is wise, honest, funny, touching, and painfully
sad with Oscar-caliber performances. It’s not rocket science to figure
out why it is thus far the best film of 2007.
GRADE: A
Howard
Schumann