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Emotional,
nostalgic, and altogether enjoyable, Tim
McCanlies' Secondhand Lions is that rarest
of family films, one that encapsulates
a mood that can be appreciated by both
young people and their parents.
Filled
as it is with references to old Hollywood
serials and the type of earnest action
dramas that Republic Pictures and RKO
(not to mention Douglas Fairbanks) used
to make, long, long ago, it's almost a
valentine to heroic movies gone by, albeit
ones that exist only in the character's
imaginations. It mixes that sort of manly
bravado with a more modern tale of a young
boy more or less abandoned by his mother
into the company of two cantankerous Texas
uncles while she flits off to parts unknown.
The
end result, while sometimes feeling a
tad manipulative in its tone - is done
in such a way that you don't mind in the
least that McCanlies is playing your heartstrings
nearly as well as Harpo Marx played an
upended Steinway.
McCanlies'
previous project was the flawless script
for The Iron Giant , for my money the
best animated film of at least the past
quarter-century. Thanks to lousy marketing,
precious few folks saw that magnificent
film in the theatres where it should have
been seen, but has since taken on cult
status on DVD.
Austin
native McCanlies' debut feature, Dancer,
Texas Pop. 81, was a knowing nod to small-town
life, a topic that has become McCanlies'
stock in trade; it's echoed both in Giant
and here, and few people can grasp the
subtle nuances of it better. There are
only so many ways to Foley in a cricket
chirrup, but all three of the director's
films have the laconic, summer-evening
feel of American rural life down pat.
Ultimately,
though, McCanlies is a whiz of a character
writer, and that's at the core of everything
he's penned. Set in the early Sixties
(just around the time of Joe Dante's equally
nostalgic but ultimately noisy Matinee)
Secondhand Lions casts Haley Joel Osment
as 14-year-old Walter, who finds himself
unceremoniously dumped at the dilapidated
rural Texas home of his eccentric uncles
Garth (Caine) and Hub (Duvall) when his
mother (Sedgwick) heads up to Dallas to
learn "court reporting."
Despite
the rumors that the aging, gun-happy uncles
have a fortune buried somewhere on their
property, Walter is naturally unhappy
about his lot, and Garth and Hub only
echo the sentiment, as perpetual bachelors
are wont to do when kids turn up unannounced.
With mom out of the picture, Walter finds
himself sitting on the front porch as
his uncles take potshots at traveling
salesmen and slowly reveal to the young
boy the story of their unique and adventure-laden
lives.
McCanlies'
film takes its time, placing revelation
after revelation like layers peeled from
an Arabian Nights-grown onion, and as
the film flashes back and forth in time
and imagination, it's suffused with a
inexorable sense of melancholy. Don't
get me wrong, though; while the film has
as much to do with the inevitable process
of aging as it does with Walter's coming
of age, it's not moribund or preachy in
style or tone. If anything, Secondhand
Lions thrives on the archaic derring-do
of films like Joe Johnston's The Rocketeer;
it has the same sort of retro vibe, but
tempered with a sweeter tone. Oscar-winners
Duvall and Caine are both in cranky top
form, and Osment, well into puberty by
now, is far less strident than you thought
he'd be.
It's
not perfect - infrequently the comedy
and drama rub up against each other too
much - but it is the genuine article:
a wholly unique family film that can moisten
your eyes even while it quickens your
pulse.
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