 |
|
 |
 |
Napoleon Dynamite |
 |
Every high school has them: those kids who seem lost
in their own world, tragically unhip and perpetually
excluded from the ranks of the beautiful and athletic. Napoleon Dynamite paints a quirky, satirical
portrait of "them" as they try to make the most of their
low-key lives in the rural community of Preston, Idaho.
The opening scene sets the stage for what we can
expect from the film's antihero, Napoleon Dynamite. On
the bus to school, Napoleon surreptitiously ties fishing
line to a plastic action figure and tosses it out the
window. He gleefully trolls the plastic hero behind the
bus—for no apparent reason other than the joy of
simpleminded (and typically harmless) mischief.
The gangly, bespectacled Napoleon, who is the
quintessential object of derision for the popular crowd,
then proceeds to meander through a random series of
seemingly meaningless vignettes involving his friends,
Deb (a budding photographer with a nearly
imperceptible crush on Napoleon) and Pedro (who is
almost completely devoid of personality, yet decides to
run for class president), and his older brother, Kip (a
32-year-old chat room junkie who still lives at home).
Each character is focused on a particular, if modest,
goal, and each must endure the mockery of those who
oppose them. In addition to the jocks and popular kids,
Napoleon also squares off against his Uncle Rico, a
sadly misguided character who's living in the past
(1982, to be precise) and who seems determined to
thwart Napoleon's best efforts.
One typical—hilarious—scene has Napoleon
lamenting his inability to attract girls because he lacks
"skills": "Girls only want boyfriends who have great
skills. You know, like nunchuck skills, bow hunting
skills, computer hacking skills." Pedro reminds him that
he likes to draw, and suggests that Napoleon sketch a
portrait of the girl he wants to ask to the dance—putting
his skills to work.
Napoleon Dynamite offers many opportunities to laugh
heartily at (with?) its underwhelming characters. It also
invites us to identify with their determination to take
risks in pursuit of what they want in life. Their progress
is modest, but real—just as is often the case in our
lives.
Napoleon has a taste for unfashionable T-shirts with
animals on them. One such shirt has the word
"Endurance" emblazoned over the top of a faded horse
graphic. One suspects that endurance might be the
primary subtext in the film, as each of the four main
characters perseveres through ridicule, scorn and
mockery in their respective pursuits.
Pedro comes from a Catholic home, and the family's
house is full of pictures of Jesus and Mary. Napoleon
mentions magic twice in passing; his favorite animal is
a "liger." "It's like a lion and tiger mixed," he says, "bred
for its skills in magic." He claims that a wizard's magic
spell protects the Loch Ness Monster.
The film doesn't have any overt sexual content. One of
Uncle Rico's money-making schemes, however, is
"Bust Must," an herbal breast-enlargement product.
Rico pitches his product to an older woman named
Starla, but also to Napoleon's high-school classmates
Summer, Trisha and Deb. (The scenes with Rico
interacting with high school girls about their breast size
have a creepy, inappropriate feel.)
Napoleon tries to ride Pedro's mountain bike over a
jump, but the ramp collapses, and Napoleon rams his
groin into the handlebars as he goes down. Napoleon's
grandmother rides over a sand dune ridge on her ATV,
flying off the back of it.
Napoleon and several other "nerdy" characters are
frequently harassed by the jocks at their high school.
These bullies slam Napoleon up against his locker, put
him in a headlock, and generally push him around. One
jock does the same thing to another geeky student,
putting him in a head lock until he coughs up 50 cents.
Later, the same bully tries to intimidate that student into
letting him "borrow" his bike.
Kip is convinced that he's a karate master and asks
Napoleon to hit him. Napoleon offers a weak jab that
Kip blocks, then kicks him in return. When Kip doesn't
expect it, Napoleon slaps him in the face. Later,
Napoleon puts Kip in a headlock while they're
wrestling. Napoleon and Kip check out Rex Kwon Do's
karate school after seeing a commercial for it on TV
where the martial arts master disarms an assailant with
a gun. At the karate school, Rex humiliates Kip by
blocking Kip's lame attacks and showing the students
how to strike back.
Uncle Rico flings a half-eaten steak at Napoleon, hitting
him in the face. Napoleon hurls a grapefruit at Rico's
van, then at Rico himself. The two then begin wrestling
on the ground, and Napoleon elbows Rico in the chest
to get away from him.
Rex Kwon Do pummels Rico. (Sounds of the encounter
are all moviegoers experience; the camera retreats to
the front of the house.) A farmer shoots a cow, horrifying
a passing busload of schoolchildren.
Napoleon frequently uses exclamations such as "gosh,"
"jeez," "freakin'," "crap" and "heck." One character talks
about being "p---ed off." Napoleon intones, "There's like
a butt-load of gangs at this school," calls people "idiots"
several times and says, "You guys are retarded."
None.
Uncle Rico is duped by an Internet offer selling a time
machine. The machine consists of a control box, an
electrified headband and a T-shaped plunger that the
user puts between his legs. Both Rico and Napoleon
find out the hard way that time travel isn't real but
electricity is, a lesson that leaves them limping.
Napoleon is prone to lying and storytelling.
Responding to a classmate's inquiry about what he did
over summer break, Napoleon responds, "I spent it with
my uncle in Alaska hunting wolverines." Later,
Napoleon brags to Pedro, "This one gang kept wanting
me to join because I'm pretty good with a bowstaff." And
when Deb gives him a picture of a woman she's
photographed as an example of the kind of work she
does, Napoleon keeps the photo and tells Pedro that
it's his girlfriend from Oklahoma.
Napoleon Dynamite is an odd yet appealing and
funny film. On the surface it appears to be just one more
iteration of the popular Revenge of the Nerds
theme: misfit kids banding together to throw off the
oppression of those who are stronger, more beautiful
and more popular. Underneath, it's less about battling
the privileged than about four kids trying to make their
own unique way in the world.
Likewise, it's a typical teen movie. And yet it isn't. Some
of the standard features are very much in place: the
odd-kid-out looking for his place in the world, and
popular teens mercilessly harassing the geeks. But
that's where the formula ends. Other elements that
countless teen movies have programmed us to
expect—profanity, flagrantly rebellious behavior, sexual
exploits and unbelievable plot twists—are absent from
this curiously un-edgy film. Call it the anti-teen
movie.
Yes, it does go for some easy, slapstick laughs at the
characters' expense. But at the same time it exudes a
knowing self-awareness. For example, Napoleon
Dynamite might be the most misnamed character in the
history of cinema. It would be hard for Napoleon to
have less in common with his namesake, the French
emperor and would-be conqueror of Europe, Napoleon
Bonaparte. In contrast, Napoleon Dynamite's gentle
goofiness marks him as a social pariah. Dynamite he is
isn't. His very name is a wink at the audience, a clue for
how to watch.
I don't believe the filmmakers intended their work to be
taken at face value. Instead, we are to recognize that
these characters are creative caricatures. We all know
these people, somehow. Thus, Napoleon Dynamite
becomes an everyman whom we can all relate to. We
laugh at his idiosyncrasies even as we realize that we
may be blind to some of our own. What could be a
mean-spirited film picking on hopelessly unaware
nerds is actually very aware of who these characters
are—and we root for them. Napoleon Dynamite
is hip precisely because its makers are aware of how unhip it is. We're not invited into the film's world to
mock these characters—though some desensitized
teens and twentysomethings may well do so—but to
relate to them and use them to reflect on our own
foibles, and our own dreams and goals.
That said, Napoleon Dynamite is a cult comedy
classic in the making (it could easily take on a Monty
Python—like mythos), and it elevates geek chic to a
whole new level. It doesn't, however, exalt
geekiness as much as it lauds the idea of being
who you are. In the words of the movie's tagline, "He's
out to prove he's got nothing to prove."
|
 |