‘American Teen’ Documentary is the Reel Deal on High School
By Bob Strauss
It’s sort of like “The O.C.” or “The Hills” or an updated John Hughes movie. Except Sundance favorite “American Teen” seems very real, and that makes all the difference.
Innovative documentarian Nanette Burstein (“The Kid Stays in the Picture”) spent senior year with a bunch of kids in Warsaw, Indiana, gradually gaining their trust and getting them to shed most of their natural camera shyness. The result, while cannily crafted and edited for maximum comic and dramatic impact, nonetheless presents each individual intimately and in a fair light. These teens have their good sides and bad, problems both genuinely serious and utterly in their own imaginations, distinctive humors, strengths and weaknesses.
We really see them growing into the adults they’ll probably become.
The mission, well-accomplished, was to single out certain archetypes, then discover what made them non-stereotypical.
Arty misfit Hannah Bailey can’t wait to leave this one-horse town but is crippled by fears she may inherit her mother’s mental instability and is disconcerted further by an unlikely romance.
Basketball star Colin Clemens knows that local hero status is one thing, but earning a scholarship is a life-or-death matter and not as easy as it may seem. Doctor’s daughter Megan Krizmanich is popular and manipulative and can be a mean girl, but she also has gigantic (and worthwhile) family expectations to live up to. Jake Tusing is, well, pretty much your total geek, but his efforts to improve himself and maybe get a date some day are completely persuasive. Then there’s hot guy Mitch Reinholt, who can be sweet or thoughtlessly cruel, an independent thinker and easily peer- pressured.
Burstein not only captures these guys at their most confessional and unguarded, she gets the context of their friendships, families and larger social circles right as well. And to illuminate the key kids’ inner fantasies, she hired animators to tailor cartoon bits specifically to each one’s personality. The soundtrack, of course, is as indie band hip as could be.
It’s all terribly slick, which could be perceived as a problem in documentary terms. But “American Teen’s” devotion to entertainment value is tempered by a certain scrupulousness. Personal as it gets, the film never seems exploitative or sensationalized or the least bit dumbed-down … or scripted, which distinguishes it from most shows about young people, whether they claim to be real or not.
Bob Strauss (818) 713-3670
bob.strauss@dailynews.com
AMERICAN TEEN – Three stars
>PG-13: language, substance abuse, teen sexuality.
>Director: Nanette Burstein.
>Running time: 1 hr. 35 min.
>Playing: ArcLight Galleria, Sherman Oaks; ArcLight, Hollywood; AMC Century 15, Century City.
>In a nutshell: Refreshingly frank and complex documentary about Indiana high-schoolers puts contrived TV “reality” shows to shame.
(c) 2008 Daily News; Los Angeles, Calif.. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.
