Putting reverse English on a timeless platitude, young director Kristine Peterson
shows us some of the endless ways in which the political is personal. The characters
in her achingly earnest romantic comedy are mostly foot soldiers in Seattle's musico-political
bohemia, cranking out power chords and photocopied 'zines aimed at raising the consciousness
of a nation spiritually starved by bland pop culture and the digital Soma of Chairman
Bill Gates. The principals are Shelly (Gross) and Suzy (Ryan), the leaders of an
all-female punk band called the No Exits, and Jimmy (Bortz), a political newsletter
publisher whose dwindling finances raise the awful specter of 9-5 employment. Suzy
and Shelly are lovers, but things are getting a bit tense of late. Shelly's wavering
on the brink of reconciliation with former boyfriend Jimmy and is sparring with Suzy
over the ideological content of their music. (Gung ho Suzy views her bludgeoning
songs solely as delivery vehicles for her doctrinal broadsides; Shelly figures a
wee bit of Ani DiFranco-ish folkie leavening couldn't hurt anything.) What's interesting
about this movie is its snapshot documentation of how absolutist, dogma-driven movements
ultimately diffuse into the confusingly protean reality of human life. Nearly everybody
here is involved in some movement or other, unselfconsciously speaking of revolutions
and "the cause" and taking turns at solo, camera-facing tirades on subjects
ranging from Dustin Hoffman's "stalker" behavior in The Graduate to Ted
Koppel's hair. But, to adapt a bumper-sticker sentiment of yesteryear, a righteous
slogan is as useful to a real woman or man as a bicycle is to a fish. There's no
purity to be found in sexual orientation, ideology, or emotion. Shelly's lack of
resolution in these areas causes no end of pain for Suzy (played with both vulnerability
and sawtoothed ferocity by Ryan) or the well-meaning, exquisitely PC Jimmy. Realizing
that she can't be what both of her lovers need, she starts assembling the rudiments
of a unique, self-reinforcing identity. Respect is due to Peterson for permitting
this level of frankness in a movie with such a clear political agenda. But Slaves
to the Underground is so lackluster in such basic areas as editing, shot composition,
acting (only Ryan and Bortz appear to have a future beyond the low-budget indie arena)
and dialogue (for the most part, classic illustrations of speech that sound written
rather than overheard) that the potential impact is diluted by half. Finally, if
a film is going to criticize Cindy Crawford for representing a false ideal of beauty,
wouldn't those words ring truer if so many of its female characters didn't look like
artfully disheveled beer commercial babes? Chalk this up as one of those movies that
you toast for good intentions in the reception hall of honorable also-rans.
2.5 stars
--Russell Smith
Film Vault Suggested Links
Different For Girls 
The Last Supper 
That Thing You Do 
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