Be Kind Rewind

Be Kind Rewind

****1/2

Reviewed by: Anton Bitel

From his music videos for Björk and the White Stripes to his feature films like Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind (2004) and The Science Of Sleep (2006), Michel Gondry has established a reputation as the quirky king of high-concept cinema delivered in a lo-fi package. His latest film, Be Kind Rewind, is no exception, restaging hilariously low-tech versions of countless mainstream movies in an unabashed parade of postmodern reflexivity; but it also sees Gondry adopting the mantle once worn by Frank Capra. For in this sentimental (if never schmaltzy) comedy of old-fashioned community values, idealism reigns and it is the little guys who - at least for a while - triumph over the oppression of larger realities.

In a neglected neighbourhood of Passaic, New Jersey, Mike (Mos Def) works at Be Kind Rewind, a run-down videostore-cum-thriftshop said by its owner Mr Fletcher (Danny Glover) to have once been the birthplace of local jazz legend Fats Waller. While Mr Fletcher is away for a week, Mike's accident-prone best friend Jerry (Jack Black) becomes magnetised during a hare-brained scheme to sabotage the nearby power plant, and inadvertently erases all the store's videocassettes.

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Terrified of disappointing his beloved boss or further jeopardising the already imperiled business, Mike convinces Jerry to help him shoot an improvised remake of the wiped Ghostbusters tape over a single afternoon, using an old camcorder, some 'special effects', and their own dubious talents as both cast and crew. Not only does regular customer Miss Falewicz (Mia Farrow) not seem to mind the absurdly amateurish reproduction, but her nephew Craig (Chandler Parker) and his homeboys are more than willing to pay extra for what become known as 'Sweded' versions of the shop's original video titles, like Rush Hour 2, Driving Miss Daisy, Robocop and The Lion King. Local laundry worker Alma (Melonie Diaz) is recruited when Jerry grows sick of having to kiss his mechanic boss Wilson (Irv Gooch) in so many films, and soon the guerilla filmmakers have become celebrities in their own neighbourhood and cult figures even further afield. Business is booming like never before, and the boys' shoddy remakes are even more popular than the DVDs that Mr Fletcher has begun purchasing in a bid to save his establishment from imminent demolition.

Eventually news of these unauthorised 'bootlegs' reaches the big studios, and executive Ms Lawson (Sigourney Weaver) is sent in literally to crush the burgeoning cottage industry, along with the renewed neighbourhood spirit that has formed around it. With just one week to go before the shop will be reduced to rubble, Mike, Jerry and their friends will make one last film, built from the lost dreams and fractured history of their own ramshackle community.

Beginning as a comedy of parochial eccentricity and urban decay (à la Palookaville or Welcome To Collingswood), and ending on a note of elegiac nostalgia for what might have been, Be Kind Rewind is a film where expectations are never quite fulfilled, be it Mike's almost relationship with Alma, or the group's quixotic attempts to save the shop. All of which is just another way of saying that Gondry may flirt with cliché, but he never gives himself wholly up to it, ensuring that there is always room in his film for wonder and surprise.

Be Kind Rewind pits the homogeneity of globalised culture against the inventiveness of local community, sets lovably outmoded analogue against slickly soulless digital, and celebrates varieties of film made outside the hegemony of the studio system. It shows cinema's potential as a galvanising medium in which viewers can actively participate, to transform themselves and reinvent the world. It may be full of madcap surrealism and clever-clever meta-cinematic touches, but it is also an unfashionably good-natured film with real heart. Oddball, endearing, and very, very funny, Gondry's film offsets its sweetness with just the right amount of sour, as its characters learn too late that it is never too late.

Be Kind Rewind is a backward-looking classic (or several) in the making, destined to be rewatched, rewound and rewarding for decades to come.

Reviewed on: 16 Feb 2008
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Be Kind Rewind packshot
After accidentally wiping all the tapes in the video store where they work, two enterprising clerks decide to re-shoot the films themselves.
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Director: Michel Gondry

Writer: Michel Gondry

Starring: Jack Black, Mos Def, Danny Glover, Mia Farrow, Melonie Diaz, Sigourney Weaver, Irv Gooch, Chandler Parker, Arjay Smith, Quinton Aaron, Gio Perez, Basia Rosas,Tomasz Soltys

Year: 2008

Runtime: 100 minutes

BBFC: 12A - Adult Supervision

Country: US

Festivals:

Sundance 2008

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