The Paperboy (2012)
Starring Zac Efron, Matthew McConaughey, David Oyelowo, John Cusack, and Nicole Kidman
Directed by Lee Daniels
I think it's extremely important that you know what you're getting into should you decide to watch The Paperboy, the latest film from Precious director Lee Daniels. This flick is pure trash...and it knows it. Reveling in the grainy look and feel of a 1970s low-budget Roger Corman flick, Daniels seems to be intending to make pure pulp and while he succeeds, the problem is that nobody really likes those types of movies for anything longer than about sixty minutes. At that point, the cheesy music and the over-the-top (or just plain awful) acting wear thin and you find yourself wondering when the hell this piece of crap is going to be over. That's kind of the case here, too. I dug the retro vibe (complete with cuts made to replicate missing frames of film), but the story peters out.
The year is 1969 and we find ourselves in the steamy city of Lately, Florida, where a man named Hillary Van Wetter (John Cusack) is on Death Row for killing a local sheriff. Newspaper reporter Ward Jansen (Matthew McConaughey) grew up in Lately and finds himself returning to his hometown to investigate what could have been a wrongful conviction for Van Wetter. While at home, Ward and his younger brother Jack (Zac Efron) meet up with the beautiful, though incredibly trashy, Charlotte Bless (Nicole Kidman) who has been communicating with Van Wetter via mail for several months and now finds herself engaged to the man without ever having seen him in person. Charlotte is sex (or sleaze) personified, but the young Jack instantly falls for her "womanly" charms, finding it difficult to go through days without seeing her despite the fact that the feeling is never reciprocated in his direction from Charlotte.
I will admit that I give Nicole Kidman some credit here for slumming it and she really comes across as the most believable and even honest character of anyone. She embraces the slutty sleaziness and creates a character that is quite memorable. As for the others in the cast, they don't fare nearly as well. Efron's actually fine, but I thought maybe we'd see some dramatic stretching for him in this role and his character is unfortunately a bit one-note. McConaughey really isn't doing anything we haven't seen from him before and the journey his character undergoes is ludicrously ridiculous. And the less said about John Cusack the better. He's definitely in the running for Worst Performance of the Year.
At its heart, The Paperboy is a young man's coming of age story...because once you get peed on by a chick, you're simply not a kid anymore. You're officially a grown up. Yep, in perhaps the film's most talked about moment, Kidman's Charlotte pees on Efron's Jack after the young guy gets ravaged by a swarm of jellyfish. And that, folks, is the kind of movie you're getting with The Paperboy. It's weird, off-the-wall, and at times enjoyable. But then things go over-the-edge (as in the aforementioned scene) and you just shake your head in disbelief at what's unfolding. Sleaze and trashiness are fine but in mild doses, and this one lingers a bit too long (with a final act that just doesn't really work).
The year is 1969 and we find ourselves in the steamy city of Lately, Florida, where a man named Hillary Van Wetter (John Cusack) is on Death Row for killing a local sheriff. Newspaper reporter Ward Jansen (Matthew McConaughey) grew up in Lately and finds himself returning to his hometown to investigate what could have been a wrongful conviction for Van Wetter. While at home, Ward and his younger brother Jack (Zac Efron) meet up with the beautiful, though incredibly trashy, Charlotte Bless (Nicole Kidman) who has been communicating with Van Wetter via mail for several months and now finds herself engaged to the man without ever having seen him in person. Charlotte is sex (or sleaze) personified, but the young Jack instantly falls for her "womanly" charms, finding it difficult to go through days without seeing her despite the fact that the feeling is never reciprocated in his direction from Charlotte.
I will admit that I give Nicole Kidman some credit here for slumming it and she really comes across as the most believable and even honest character of anyone. She embraces the slutty sleaziness and creates a character that is quite memorable. As for the others in the cast, they don't fare nearly as well. Efron's actually fine, but I thought maybe we'd see some dramatic stretching for him in this role and his character is unfortunately a bit one-note. McConaughey really isn't doing anything we haven't seen from him before and the journey his character undergoes is ludicrously ridiculous. And the less said about John Cusack the better. He's definitely in the running for Worst Performance of the Year.
At its heart, The Paperboy is a young man's coming of age story...because once you get peed on by a chick, you're simply not a kid anymore. You're officially a grown up. Yep, in perhaps the film's most talked about moment, Kidman's Charlotte pees on Efron's Jack after the young guy gets ravaged by a swarm of jellyfish. And that, folks, is the kind of movie you're getting with The Paperboy. It's weird, off-the-wall, and at times enjoyable. But then things go over-the-edge (as in the aforementioned scene) and you just shake your head in disbelief at what's unfolding. Sleaze and trashiness are fine but in mild doses, and this one lingers a bit too long (with a final act that just doesn't really work).
The RyMickey Rating: C-
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