FILM .......... ▼........... G PHOTO: H BO FILMS/FINE UNE FEATURES k Hope and conformity PHOTO BV 9COTT GREEN. HBO FILMS FINE LINE FEATURES us Van Sant can create tension rarely found outside the horror genre. His seem­ ingly simple, quiet little movies like Main N oche and G erry, or even the bigger studio releases G ood Will Hunting and Fnrulmg Forrester, keep you nervously anticipating the next move. Because the films often deal with vulnerable characters in difficult situations, you’re always kind of desperately hoping they won’t fuck up. From the very' beginning, his new film, E le­ phant, which opens Nov. 7, lets you know something’s amiss. T h e camera pans the clouds above Portland, a high schixil girl ninning out­ side during gym class pauses, searching the sky, and the tension is palpable. Unless you shelter yourself from all media, you already know what the movie is about. Sin ce its double win at the C annes Film Festi- val for Best Film and Best Director (normally not allowed at the illustrious event), everyone is talking about the new Am erican movie, directly influenced by the Colum bine High Schixil massacre, that takes on gun violence. Now, I am not a critic who feels I have to love everything Van Sant has ever done because he’s gay and he lives in Portland. These situations can be tough, especially if you know you could run into people you pan at various social events. T h a t’s my disclaimer. T h e truth is Elephant is so goddamned good, Portland critics got lucky this time. Like G erry, Elephant is full o f achingly long shots and very little dialogue. A melange o f stu­ dents— the jock, his girlfriend, the nerd, the shallow girls, the sensitive photographer— move through their day, oblivious to the outcasts who are home packing their guns (ordered off the Internet) into duffel bags. T h e camera follows each student along, picking up the subtleties of bias and assumption among students and teach­ ers that plague high school youth. Gu s Van Sant’s new film finds the elephant in the room, and it is us by L isa B radshaw Interestingly, the standout performance belongs to the kid who doesn’t fit into a neat stereotype. John (played by heart-wrenchingly cute John Robinson, the only one who has already shot another movie) is the quintessential Portland indie everykid— a somewhat troubled home life but with obvious love, popular enough to have friends, but unpopular enough to con­ stantly be in trouble with the principal. He and his drunk father (Timothy Bottoms) are the anchors of compassion in an otherwise emotion­ ally and architecturally barren environment. It’s John’s brief encounters with photographer Elias (Elias M cConnell) and Gay Straight Alliance attendee Acadia (Alicia Miles) that provide the film’s hope of future supportive alliances. Again like G erry, Elephant was shot with no real script— even the characters were written around the actual Portland-area students Van Sant chose to cast. (Unknown actors lend to a sense o f anonymity.) T he title Elephant is derived from a 1989 British short o f the same name abixit brutal violence in Northern Ireland, which, in turn, took its name from the famous saying of ignoring the elephant in the room. These processes are all akin to the Van Sant touch, and so are the slip­ ping in of two queer ele­ ments— the inclusion o f the Gay Straight A lliance meeting (the topic: C an you tell if someone is gay by how they look?) and a shower-scene kiss between A lex (A lex Frost) and Eric (Eric Deulen) just before they shixit down their classmates. O h no! T he psycho killers are gay! But witness­ ing the kiss is a far more ambiguous experience than hearing a h nit it. Knowing he’s about to either die or go to prison for the rest of his Acadia com forts Jo h n before heading o ff to her G ay Straight life, Enc calmly joins Alex A lliance m eeting From left, Alex Frost, producer Danny W olf and G us Van Sant on the set of E lep h an t in the shower, and his words are barely audible: with your fellow students— not to stick out too “I’ve never even kissed anyhxly, have you?" much, to conform. And if you don’t and you are a certain age, you may be led to believe Van Sant maintains it’s not really a gay that not conforming means that you will live moment. “I thought that they were inexperi­ like an outsider for the rest o f your life.” enced with things like sexual intimacy,” he W hich is something that’s remarkable for a explains, “which was important to point out— 52-year-old man to remember, bur Van Sant, their age, experience and that one of them just with every movie, always kissed the other one because, does. “T h e two kids may as he said, h e’d never kissed have really wanted to belong anyone before." and conform, but things T he scene is simple, not fraught with meaning, not a weren’t working out that way with them, and the situation moment of awareness that could have taken away their leads to something else. Alex hope for a future.” and Eric’s motives for any­ thing are never fully Sounds almost like mean­ explained. Nothing in Ele­ ing. But Van Sant concludes the statement by adding, phant is explained. Critics are always trying to “Just a guess.” Elephant isn’t a perfect figure Van Sant exit, asking movie. Three girls group­ him all these questions about purging in the bathrixim what his movies “mean.” (I seems very A m erican Pie; Eric did, too.) But unless it’s pretty and A lex’s watching of a doc­ obvious like, say, in To Die For umentary on A dolf Hitler is (rabid quest for what passes as metaphorically forced yet still fame in America leads one to do bad things), meaning is seemingly pointless. —Gus Van Sant But the easy, quiet move­ not finite. As the director explained to me when Gerry ran in Portland, ments o f John, A lex and Elias, as well as the he interprets them like everyone else. His dia­ frightened, mousy M ichelle (Kristen Hicks), provide a striking juxtaposition to detached logue is scattered with “I think” and “maybe,” like he’s talking about films someone else made. violence, K ith in everyday bullying and in ran­ dom mass murder. Elephant explores the para­ T hat said, Van Sant doesn’t have the dox of beauty and violence, which is difficult answers to problems with gun violence in the to do but offers great rewards. J H United States. “I can’t say for sure any more than anyone else,” he acknowledges. “I believe LlSA B radshaw is the Arts and Culture Editor o f it is a combination o f things. There are many guas. There is a certain demand for blending in Just Out and can he reached at lisa@justout.ccrm. T thought that they were inexperienced with things like sexual intimacy...one of them just kissed the other one because..Jiefd n ev er kissed anyone before ”