Heraldnet.com
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2010 2:16 pm
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Monday


Lynnwood woman knew area's stories long before ...
Everett rethinks boutique wineries
A tidy lawn could be law in Lynnwood
Sunday


Marysville family comes together amid devastati...
Monroe Correctional Complex to lessen security ...
Extra patrols will be watching for drunken driv...
Saturday


Olympics are in the air
Everett police officers cleared in 2008 shootin...
Edmonds woman leaves gift of millions
Friday


Budget squeeze may close beloved Trafton school
Endgame near on airport flight debate?
Aaron Reardon laments political sparring with c...
Thursday


4-car police pileup in Everett under investigation
Edmonds educator, famous announcer dies
Bill would suspend limits on tax hikes
Wednesday


Citizenship classes: All for a better life
Many Snohomish County kids haven't had second d...
Snohomish County jail thrives under sheriff's m...
Tuesday


Mukilteo kids’ cards help Haitians
County Council increases scrutiny on Reardon
Pentagon report a good sign for Everett's Navy ...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Entertainment   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

(click to enlarge)
** ADDS TITLE ** In this film still released by Miramax Films, Jesse Eisenberg, left, and Kristen Stewart are shown in a scene from, "Adventureland." (AP Photo/Miramax Films, Abbot Genser) ** NO SALES **
Associated Press /Miramax Films  (click to enlarge)
Jesse Eisenberg (left) and Martin Starr work the "Advertureland" crowd.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Melanie Munk, Features Editor
munk@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, April 3, 2009

Director's experience puts fun in 'Adventureland'

An attitude adjustment is in store for new college grad James: Expecting to travel through Europe for the summer, his financially challenged family has just informed him he'll be working instead. Best available job: tending the midway at an amusement park.

A letdown? Yes, but the summer of '87 will be a memorable one, otherwise writer-director Greg Mottola wouldn't have devoted his new movie "Adventureland" to it.

This autobiographical comedy from the director of "Superbad" covers well worn ground, with various youthful joys and disillusionments spread out against a collection of vintage songs.

The reason it plays well is the appealing cast and the tang of lived-in experience. Mottola really did work at a Long Island amusement part called Adventureland in the late 1980s, and you sense that somebody's direct memories are at play here.

James is played by Jesse Eisenberg, a kid with frizzed-out hair and a sincere, quizzical manner (he was the older son in "The Squid and the Whale"). James is stuck setting up the ring-toss booth and calling out the action for the mechanical horse race, as the sound system blares out "Rock Me Amadeus" for the 20th time that day.

Plus there's love. Duh.

Sure, every guy on the midway moons over the exotic Lisa P. (a perfect moniker), played by Margarita Levieva, but James also notices the quieter allure of Em (Kristen Stewart, late of "Twilight"), a deadpan co-worker.

There's a requisite nerd (Martin Starr), a couple of insufferable carnival "lifers" ("Saturday Night Live" stalwarts Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig) and one park janitor whose considerable coolness factor amongst the other workers rests on the rumor that he once gigged with Lou Reed.

He's played by Ryan Reynolds, who deftly navigates the line between decency and a vaguely creepy feeling that this dude, who's 10 years older than anybody else there, ought to have moved on with his life by now. In short, he's got a hint of Wooderson from "Dazed and Confused" about him.

It's such a different kind of movie from "Superbad" that it's pointless to compare them. So we will anyway. "Adventureland" doesn't have the uproarious highs of Mottola's previous comedy, but it shares the genial attitude and relaxed pace of that film.

And in the summer-night talks between the two possible lovers, Eisenberg and Stewart capture a rare, unforced intimacy.

We don't feel like we're watching the cure for cancer here, just a little affection between two decent, eccentric people in a summer before things have really started for them. That's an acceptable trade-off for the belly laughs of "Superbad."


COMMENTS | Be the first to comment

Log in or register to post a new comment.


To read other terms and conditions, click here

Other Advertisers
TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes

ADVERTISEMENT