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Paranoid Park is a 2007 coming of age teen drama film written and directed by Gus Van Sant. The film is based on the novel of the same name by Blake Nelson and takes place in Portland, Oregon. It s the story of a teenage skateboarder (played by Gabe Nevins) set against the backdrop of a police investigation into a mysterious death.
Van Sant wrote the draft script in two days after reading and deciding to adapt Nelson s novel. To cast the film s youths, Van Sant posted an open casting call on social networking website MySpace inviting teenagers to audition for speaking roles, as well as experienced skateboarders to act as extras. Filming began in October 2006 and took place at various locations in and around Portland. Scenes at the fictional Eastside Skatepark were filmed at Burnside Skatepark which was, like Eastside, built illegally by skateboarders.
Paranoid Park premiered on May 21, at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival and was given a limited release on March 7, 2008. It grossed over US$4,481,000 from its $3 million budget. The film received mostly positive reviews; some critics praised the direction and cinematography in particular, though others believed the film to be overly stylized and slow paced. It won one Independent Spirit Award, two Boston Society of Film Critics awards and the Cannes Film Festival s special 60th anniversary prize.
Plot
Although the film is told in non-chronological order, the following synopsis tells the plot of the film in order.
Alex, a 16-year-old skateboarder, rides a freight train clandestinely with a man named Scratch whom he has just met at the Eastside Skatepark, known as Paranoid Park . While the train is moving a security guard notices the pair, chases after them, and tries to get them off by hitting Scratch with his flashlight. During the melee, Alex hits him with his skateboard and the guard, losing balance, falls onto another track into the path of an oncoming freight train which cuts him in half. Alex tries to destroy some of the evidence. For example, he throws his skateboard into the Willamette River from the Steel Bridge, and when he arrives at his friend Jared s house, he showers and disposes of the clothes he had been wearing.
Alex is later questioned at school by Detective Richard Lu, as are several other students who had been skateboarding on the night in question. It is revealed that the police have recovered Alex s skateboard, though they have not traced it back to him, and have identified DNA evidence which places the skateboard at the scene of the security guard s death.
Throughout the film, Alex keeps the incident to himself, and does not confide in anyone else. After having impassive sex with his girlfriend, Jennifer, he breaks up with her. Another of his friends, Macy, notices that he is worried about something. She advises him to write down whatever is bothering him as a cathartic release if nothing else. He initially rejects the idea, but eventually writes an account, which becomes the basis for the story. After completing the written account, Alex burns it.
Cast
- Gabe Nevins as Alex
- Daniel Liu as Detective Richard Lu
- Jake Miller as Jared
- Taylor Momsen as Jennifer
- Lauren McKinney as Macy
- Scott Patrick Green as Scratch
- John Burrowes as Security Guard
Production
Gus Van Sant chose to adapt American author Blake Nelson s novel Paranoid Park into a film of the same name because it was set in his hometown of Portland, Oregon, because he was an amateur skateboarder himself and because he found the story particularly interesting. At the time that he first read the novel, he was accumulating the finances for another film, but abandoned the project and decided instead to write a screenplay based on Nelson s story. His first draft of the script was written in two days, and the final draft was just 33 pages long.
Similar to his 2003 film Elephant, Van Sant sought non-professional young actors to play the main roles, and so created a page for the film on social networking site MySpace. On the page, he posted an open casting call for males and females aged 14–18 who were skaters, honor roll, cheerleaders, punks, drama kids, musicians, artists, student council, athletes, award winners, class skippers, photographers, band members, leaders, followers, shy kids, class clowns . Two audition sessions were held on August 3 and August 5, 2006, as well as an additional casting call for experienced skateboarders to act as extras in the film; a total of 2,971 people auditioned. Gabe Nevins, having never acted before, heard about the casting call from a skateboard store and originally auditioned as an extra. Nevins was cast in the lead role, which he says was based on his innocence that Van Sant believed trained actors to be lacking. Jake Miller, originally from Boise, Idaho, was on a road trip in Portland when he heard about the casting call and decided to audition with his friends. Taylor Momsen was a professional actor beforehand and received the Paranoid Park script through her agent. She won the role after sending her taped audition to Van Sant. The film features two cameo appearances: Alex s father is played by professional skateboarder Jay Smay Williamson, and his uncle is played by the film s cinematographer Christopher Doyle. Most of the actors wore their own clothes and wrote some of their characters dialogue to maintain a sense of authenticity.
Principal photography began in Oregon in October 2006. Filming locations included Portland State University, the Steel Bridge, St. Johns Bridge, Lloyd Center, Madison High School and Van Sant s own beach house. Scenes at the fictional Eastside Skatepark were filmed at Portland s Burnside Skatepark, which was, like Eastside, built illegally by skateboarders and subsequently approved by the city as a public skatepark. Van Sant said that his request to film at Burnside was treated with some suspicion by the park s users, as What none of them wanted was for us to portray a corny image of the park. Cinematographer Christopher Doyle shot parts of the film with a wide-angle lens that is used to shoot skate videos. The film s skateboarding sequences were shot on Super 8 mm film, a medium commonly used in skate videos, and the remainder of the film was shot on 35mm film, Van Sant s medium of choice.
Distribution
Theatrical release
The world premiere of Paranoid Park was held on May 21, at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. The film was subsequently screened at the Auckland International Film Festival, Edinburgh International Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, Athens Film Festival, Raindance Film Festival, New York Film Festival, Vienna International Film Festival and the Oslo Films from the South Festival before its theatrical release. Its international tour of the festival circuit continued after its U.S. release, and it was screened at the Rotterdam International Film Festival, Portland International Film Festival, London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival, Transilvania International Film Festival, Midnight Sun Film Festival and the Cinepur Choice Film Festival.
Paranoid Park was given a limited release in the United States on March 7, 2008. It grossed US$30,678 on its debut weekend, playing in two cinemas. The following week, it expanded to 22 locations and grossed $75,917 with a per-screen average of $3,451 and a total gross of $118,784. It earned another $90,403 from 36 locations in its third week with a per-screen average of $2,511 and a cumulative gross of $241,672. The film ended its theatrical run with a total domestic gross of $486,767 and a foreign gross of $3,994,693, giving a worldwide total of $4,481,460.
Home media
Paranoid Park was released on DVD in Canada on July 22, 2008, and in the United States on October 7, 2008. The disc includes trailers for The Last Winter and How to Rob a Bank which precede the film.
Reception
Critical reception
Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 77% of 124 collected reviews for the film were positive, with an average score of 6.97/10. The site s consensus states Director Gus Van Sant once again superbly captures the ins and outs of teenage life in Paranoid Park, a quietly devastating portrait of a young man living with guilt and anxiety. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 83 based on 27 reviews, indicating universal acclaim .
Manohla Dargis of The New York Times described Paranoid Park as a haunting, voluptuously beautiful portrait of a teenage boy and as a modestly scaled triumph without a false or wasted moment . She praised Van Sant s direction, the cinematography and the overall realism of the film. The Los Angeles Times Carina Chocano summarized the film as a gorgeously stark, mesmerizingly elliptical story . She commended in particular the dreamy camera work and the charged, simple direction . J. Hoberman wrote for The Village Voice that Few directors have revisited their earliest concerns with such vigor. He concluded his review saying, Paranoid Park is wonderfully lucid: It makes confusion something tangible and heartbreak the most natural thing in life. Todd McCarthy of Variety magazine wrote that Through immaculate use of picture, sound and time, the director adds another panel to his series of pictures about disaffected, disconnected youth. He praised the lovely cinematography and the credibility of the female characters, though he felt that the soundtrack was sometimes distracting. Writing for New York magazine, David Edelstein opined that the film was a supernaturally perfect fusion of Van Sant s current conceptual-art-project head-trip aesthetic and Blake Nelson s finely tuned first-person young adult novel . He felt that Paranoid Park was different from Van Sant s previous experimental films in that it works , though he criticized Nevins s clinically inexpressive acting. Rolling Stone s Peter Travers awarded the film 3.5 out of 4 stars and commented that the combination of the soundtrack with the visual miracles of the cinematography, a defiant slap at slick Hollywood formula, is mesmerizing . In a review for The Hollywood Reporter, Kirk Honeycutt named the film one of best movies yet .
Alternatively, William Arnold of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer graded the film as a C+ and described it as a movie about its teen hero s inability to express his feelings: to himself, to his parents, to his friends and, unfortunately, to the audience . He criticized the amateurish cinematography, the half-hearted attempts at mystery and the wooden cast. Salon.com s Andrew O Hehir wrote that Paranoid Park s highly aestheticized and stylized depictions of teenage life sometimes seem as if they were shot through the wrong end of a telescope . He felt that the dialogue was repetitious and that teenage existence as portrayed in the film was less realistic than most Hollywood clichés. New York Press critic Armond White wrote that, in the film, Van Sant reaches out to teen subculture, only to embalm its dissatisfaction in artiness and found it to be full of art-movie clichés . David Edwards, writing for The Daily Mirror, called the film Dreary with a capital D and slow, melancholic, but mostly just plain weird .
Top ten lists
The film appeared on numerous critics top ten lists of the best films of 2008:
- 3rd – J. Hoberman, The Village Voice
- 4th – V.A. Musetto, New York Post
- 5th – Liam Lacey, The Globe and Mail
- 5th – Scott Tobias, The A.V. Club
- 5th – Sheri Linden, The Hollywood Reporter
- 6th – Manohla Dargis, The New York Times
- 6th – Rene Rodriguez, The Miami Herald
- 8th – Noel Murray, The A.V. Club
Awards and nominations
Paranoid Park was nominated for two Independent Spirit Awards for Best Feature and the Piaget Producers Award (Neil Kopp, also for Old Joy), winning the latter. After its debut at the Cannes Film Festival, the film won the festival s special 60th anniversary prize and was nominated for the prestigious Palme d Or. The film won two awards from the Boston Society of Film Critics for Best Director (Gus Van Sant, also for Milk) and Best Cinematography (Christopher Doyle and Rain Kathy Li). It was nominated for but did not win the Bodil Award for Best American Film awarded by the Danish Film Critics Association.
Soundtrack
Paranoid Park: Original Soundtrack | |
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Soundtrack album by
Various Artists
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Released | October 15, 2007 |
Length | 46:13 |
Label | Uwe UK |
Producer | Tom Rothrock Rob Schnapf Elliott Smith |
Most of the music choices came about during the editing process; Van Sant and the editors listened to each other s iTunes collections while working, and would use the songs they heard which they thought worked well. The film s soundscapes—described by Sam Adams of the Los Angeles Times as a wash of foreign noise —were mostly made by musician Ethan Rose and described by Van Sant as very complicated . LA Weekly s Randall Roberts praised the soundtrack highly, writing, It doesn t happen too often that a film s music will tweak my visual and sonic filter to such an extent that I actually perceive a whole class of people in a new light, with more depth or empathy or whatever. The soundtrack was first released in France in October 2007, and in the United States in March 2008 to coincide with the film s release.
No. | Title | Performer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Gradisca E il Principe | Nino Rota | 2:25 |
2. | Angeles | Elliott Smith | 2:54 |
3. | The White Lady Loves You More | Elliott Smith | 2:24 |
4. | Il Giardino Delle Fate | Nino Rota | 2:13 |
5. | I Can Help | Billy Swan | 4:00 |
6. | Tunnelmouth Blues | Henry Davies | 3:10 |
7. | Outlaw | Cast King | 4:08 |
8. | Strongest Man in the World | Menomena | 5:37 |
9. | I Heard That | Cool Nutz | 3:59 |
10. | La Porticina Segreta | Nino Rota | 1:52 |
11. | We Will Revolt | José Ramires | 1:58 |
12. | L Arcobaleno Per Giulietta | Nino Rota | 1:23 |
13. | Symphony No. 9, 4. | Ludwig van Beethoven (composer) | 3:20 |
14. | Song One | Ethan Rose | 4:05 |
15. | La Chambre Blanche | Robert Normandeau | 4:00 |
16. | Walk Through (Resonant Landscape) No. 2 | Frances White | 3:45 |
Further reading
Sorrento, Matthew. Teen Crime and Redemption: Gus Van Sant s Elephant and Paranoid Park. The New American Crime Film. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2012.
Year | 2007 |
ReleaseDate | 2007-10-24 |
RuntimeMins | 85 |
RuntimeStr | 1h 25min |
Plot | A teenage skateboarder’s life begins to fray after he is involved in the accidental death of a security guard. |
Awards | Awards, 8 wins & 15 nominations |
Directors | Gus Van Sant |
Writers | Gus Van Sant, Blake Nelson |
Stars | Gabe Nevins, Daniel Liu, Taylor Momsen |
Produced by | David Allen Cress,Marin Karmitz,Nathanaël Karmitz,Neil Kopp |
Cinematography by | Christopher Doyle,Rain Li |
Film Editing by | Gus Van Sant |
Casting By | Bernard Telsey,David Vaccari,Lana Veenker |
Art Direction by | John Pearson-Denning |
Set Decoration by | Sean Fong |
Costume Design by | Chapin Simpson |
Makeup Department | David Atherton,Kristenlee Morton |
Production Management | Brett Cranford,Claire Dornoy,Rahma Goubar,Mark Pedante |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | Kyle LeMire,Jonas Spaccarotelli |
Art Department | Jenelle Giordano,Adam Johnson,Drew Pinniger,Dan Schaefer |
Sound Department | Felix Andrew,Yannick Boulot,Pascal Chauvin,Vincent Cosson,Noah Davis,Philippe Dongé,Eric Ferret,Johann Nallet,Francis Perreard,Neil Riha,Benjamin Rosier,Leslie Shatz,Franck Tassel |
Special Effects by | Solomon Burbridge |
Visual Effects by | Shirak Agresta,Ray DiCarlo,Tarn Fox,Jalal Jemison,Brian Kinkley,Zach Lewis,Tsui Ling Toomer,Peter Vickery,Jon Weigand,Chel White |
Camera and Electrical Department | Matt Barbee,Christopher Blauvelt,Tyson Carpenter,Kyril Cvetkov,Paul Fanning,T.G. Firestone,Bruce ‘Sarge’ Fleskes,Desera Frentress,Andrew Gallegos,Nate Goodman,Scott Patrick Green,Mike Hanauska,Steve Hubert,Brent Lawson,Brian C. Lawson,Bruce Lawson,Stephen MacDougall,Matthew May,David McMurry,Eliza Plumlee,Greg Schmitt,Joe Vitellaro,Scott Walters |
Casting Department | James Buehring,Sally Gates,Eryn Goodman,Heather Harlow,Lori Lewis,Simon Max Hill,Elias McConnel,Brandon Medford,Danny Stoltz |
Costume and Wardrobe Department | Amanda Needham |
Editorial Department | Jake Buff,Dicky Dahl,Eric Hill,Mato |
Location Management | Sara Burton |
Music Department | Rachel Fox |
Transportation Department | Victoria Mischa Austreng,Steve Evans,David Norris,Jason Ruffolo |
Additional Crew | George Adams,Amber Bariaktari,Caroline Baurez,Cora Benesh,Colin McDougall Brown,Kari A. Coleman,Brett Cranford,Morgan Currie,Shayna Goldstein,Nicole Hawkins,Andrea Hofer,Huma Khan,Devan Linforth,Rachel Lipsey,Chip Mefford,Tyler J. Peterson,Davis Priestley,Yona Prost,Eric Rae,Brandon Ritter,Lance Rosen,Joe Rynearson,Patrick Sandefur,Jonathan ‘Brad’ Shinpaugh,Brian Shotzbarger,Amy Teitter,Derek Wilson |
Thanks | Sage Bolyard,Edouard Dubois,Danny Elfman,Kevin Fletcher,Richard Francis,Didier Kunstlinger,Maud Leclair,Mark Scott,Chuck Willis,Hal Willner |
Genres | Crime, Drama, Mystery |
Companies | MK2 Productions, Meno Films, Centre national du cinéma et de l’image animée (CNC) |
Countries | France, USA |
Languages | English |
ContentRating | R |
ImDbRating | 6.6 |
ImDbRatingVotes | 30747 |
MetacriticRating | 83 |
Keywords | skateboarder,underage sex,portland oregon,skateboard park,blonde |