As
we know, high school can be a difficult and
challenging place for even the most socially
adaptive student. For those who are different in
one way or another, it can be misery, and
alienated students do not always find a
compassionate counselor or friend to steer them
through the tough times. In the movies, however,
it is often a different story. We have seen
several films recently about teens that have
lost their way but somehow find the perfect
mentor to support them. The latest example of
this is Terri, a new film by Azazel Jacobs,
whose 2008 Momma's Man, was a work of rare
honesty about a recently married man who falls
into a psychological paralysis that keeps him
from accepting the reality of his adult life.
Though the genre of teen misfits has been done
before, Terri looks at the situation from a
different vantage point and the result is a film
of unusual freshness. Based on a screenplay
Jacobs wrote with novelist Patrick Dewitt, Terri
brings together an unlikely friendship between
Terri (Jacob Wysocki), a heavily oversized
parentless teenager who lives with his Uncle
James (Creed Bratton) who is in the beginning
stages of Alzheimer's, Chad (Bridger Zadina), a
skinny, androgynous-looking youth with a
high-pitched squeaky voice who directs his anger
towards himself by pulling his hair out, and
Heather ((Olivia Crocicchia), an attractive girl
who has developed an unfortunate reputation
around school for inappropriate sexual acting
out.
Terri is consistently late to school and comes
to class dressed in pajamas because he feels
they are more comfortable. He is constantly
teased and bullied by those who do not
understand (and perhaps never will) the meaning
of empathy. His behavior, while otherwise
normal, can be bizarre. When his uncle asks him
to set traps for mice in their attic, Terri
takes the traps out into a wooded area near his
suburban home and gleefully watches the dead
mice being torn to shreds by devouring falcons.
His tardiness and odd behavior draws the
attention of the school's vice-principal Mr.
Fitzgerald (John C. Reilly) who sets up sessions
with Terri each week for counseling. Attempting
to play the role of buddy rather than authority
figure, Fitzgerald calls Terri “dude”, uses
“hip” language, and exchanges high-fives, but
his behavior often feels strained.
Terri learns to appreciate the attention he is
given, however, and, though he is tight lipped
at the beginning of the meetings, he slowly
begins to open up and express his feelings.
Fitzgerald also has his problems at home and is
not averse to sharing them with Terri. His
sharing about his personal life, however
inappropriate it may be for a school
administrator, does provide a more level playing
field and a closer relationship grows between
the two people struggling to make sense of the
world. An awkward late night party at Terri's
house filled with drugs, alcohol, and sexual
experimentation could have become a disaster,
except for Terri's new found sense of self that
allows him to know intuitively when to back
off.
There are few dramatic movements in Terri, no
sudden insights, and no startling epiphanies
backed by the swelling chords of an orchestra.
There is, rather, simply a growing ability of
the characters to see beyond their differences
to discover their common humanity. While the
question of what Terri can do to lose some
weight is oddly never brought up either by his
mentor or his friends, Terri is a sweet, tender,
and very observant film about young people
coming to terms with the reality of their being
different. It is not a cruel film in the
slightest but one that conveys a sincere
affection for its troubled characters, and the
natural performances of Wysocki, Zadina, and
Crocicchia make it a film to remember and
cherish.
GRADE: A-