What we have here is a hard-boiled High School movie. Students in and around an underground drug ring allow Brick to revel in deceit and ironic detachment. Rian Johnson’s first movie then leavens itself through Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s romantic heroism.
So what if JGL is mid-twenties posing as a teenager, a substitute for a younger guy as it were.
We’re talking Very Entertaining Movie here.
Brick marks the first pairing of star writer-director Rian Johnson with star star Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Viewing it makes clear why the Star wanted to work with the Director again and why Looper’s current success is no fluke.
Just this side of LOL and arch throughout, Brick finally scores a belly laugh by ringing a bell, er, a can.
The absurdly complex plot – complete with often impenetrable dialog – brings The Big Sleep to mind.
The Big Sleep goes to High School it is.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s understated performance as an ultra-cool highschooler is quite effective and increasingly charismatic. Having just seen him in Looper, he looks very young in Brick from seven years earlier.
The rest of the cast is competent if not tremendous.
And hey, isn’t that the legendary Richard Roundtree as the Assistant V.P.? Yes, yes it is.
Opens brilliantly, with a traumatized guy viewing a corpse wearing three blue bracelets, then cuts to a flashback of that same arm – same blue bracelets – slipping a note into a locker. And we’re hooked.
Tragically hip and studded with great lines like “put that body to bed.” Now that’s a putdown.
Well sordid. Hide virgin eyes.
High School surrealism.