Yosemite (FILM REVIEW)
by Kam Williams
Creepy
Coming-of-Age Flick Explores the Dark Side of Childhood
Inspired by
a couple of short stories by James Franco, Yosemite is an eerie
bildungsroman exploring some decidedly dark and dangerous sides of
childhood. The drama features a trio of discrete tales which
ultimately merge in fairly effective fashion.
The action
unfolds in Palo Alto in 1985, which is where we find a trio of 5th
graders facing different emotional issues. 10 year-old Chris (Everett
Meckler) and his younger brother, Alex (Troy Tinnirello), are driving
to Yosemite National Park with their father (Franco) who's recently
separated from their mom.
Their plans
for quality time are affected, en route, by their dad's admission
that he's a recovering alcoholic. Upon their arrival. the vacation is
all but ruined when the three get lost hiking, followed by Chris'
finding the charred remains of what looks like a human skeleton.
The second
chapter of this coming-of-age adventure revolves around the
predicament of Joe (Alec Mansky), a product of divorce in dire need
of a father figure. Unfortunately, to fill a void, he naively settles
on Henry (Henry Hopper), a creepy-looking loner sharing a love of
comic books. Against the boy's better judgment, he even accepts an
invitation back to the possible pedophile's humble abode.
The last
segment is about Ted (Calum John), a kid whose beloved cat, Charlie,
has gone missing. Trouble is, there's been a sighting of a mountain
lion roaming around town. And since his father's (Steven Wiig)
ostensibly too consumed with Silicon's Valley burgeoning Computer
Revolution to care about the predator, Ted enlists the assistance of
pals Chris and Joe to embark on a big game hunt in the hills just
beyond suburbia.
Yosemite
was both directed and adapted to the screen by Gabrielle Demeestere
(The Color of Time) who employed an admirably understated approach to
Franco's source material. An earnest examination of the loss of
innocence, this critic could've appreciated more if the
subject-matter hadn't be so relentlessly dark and disturbing.
Very Good
(2.5 stars)
Rated R for sexuality, nudity and
profanity
Running time: 82 minutes
Distributor: Monterey Media
To see a trailer for Yosemite,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mseo8idx75s
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