British writer-director Peter Chelsom made magic with his first two movies, Hear
My Song and Funny Bones, two of the best and most offbeat films of the Nineties.
With his first American film, The Mighty, Chelsom has instead made an After-school
Special. Granted, this time out Chelsom only directed, the screenplay is by Charles
Leavitt, who adapted it from Rodman Philbrickís award-winning young-teen novel Freak
the Mighty. Sentimental and quixotic, The Mighty is good family fare; itís especially
tuned in to the narrative needs of those suffering (in the past or the present) those
distinctively adolescent agonies of feeling like a social misfit. The story centers
on the unlikely friendship between two miserable 14-year-olds: the big, sad lug named
Max Kane (Henson) who lives with his grandparents (Rowlands and Stanton) in their
basement ever since his dad, ìKiller Kane,î went to prison; and the smart, little
kid with large leg braces and crutches named Kevin Dillon (Culkin) who suffers from
a degenerative disease called Morquioís Syndrome (the same disease that hobbles the
kid in Simon Birch). Both boys are bullied by the neighborhood toughs, but together
they find the skill and imagination to vanquish all enemies. Inspired by the spirit
of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table, Kevin climbs aboard Maxís shoulders
and they commit acts of derring-do (some more believable than others). Itís during
these moments that Chelsomís whimsical touch reveals its hand as images of a medieval
kingdom are transplanted to modern Cincinnati. Henson is warmly believable as the
oversized kid (though not nearly as freakishly huge as the voiceover descriptions
make him sound), but Culkin is hamstrung with too many precocious sick-kid cutenesses.
As Kevinís mom, Stone turns in some nice, deglamorized work, though the script never
calls for her to do anything thatís not standard issue. As the grandparents, Gram
and Grim, Rowlands and Stanton make an enjoyably American Gothic-type pair. Anderson,
however, is saddled with an accent that sounds fresh out of an acting class workshop
and a role that practically screams, ìSee, I can play characters other than Agent
Dana Scully!î That point remains to be demonstrated. A subplot about Maxís father
has the feel of a trumped-up and extraneous climax. The Mighty is sure to play into
some kind of childhood existentialism in which outcast-feeling kids are buoyed by
such ideas as ìa knight proves his worthiness through his deeds.î So too with movies.
The Mighty is better-than-average family entertainment, but it falls short of inspiration and enchantment.
--Marjorie Baumgarten
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