Kevin Bacon, Brad Renfro, Maximilian Schell, Calista Flockhart.
(PG-13, 101 min.)
The arrival of this subtle, endearing, emotionally nuanced film is a blessing for
movie fans but a loss for the American slang lexicon. No longer can we say, for example,
"I can't stand to be in the same room with that guy; he's just so Joe Eszterhas"
and be absolutely sure we've used an exact synonym for "loathsome, maggot-brained
perv." A display of disciplined, humane talent from Mr. Jade himself? The pud-stroking
hack responsible for Showgirls, Sliver, and Basic Instinct? Believe it. With help
from talented young director Ferland and a sublime performance from Kevin Bacon,
Eszterhas has created a gentle and affecting ode to universal growing-up conflicts
within a beautifully rendered evocation of a specific time and place. Bacon stars
as Billy Magic, a well-traveled disc jockey who in 1960 takes over the featured rock
& roll show at a station located in the less than prestigious Cleveland market.
Leering, chain-smoking Billy is effortlessly cool and his playlist is a roots rock
aficionado's wet dream, but something about his manner suggests a man with as much
guile and raw appetite as soul. Shortly after rolling into town in his red Caddy
convertible, he hires a shy young immigrant kid named Karchy Jonas (Renfro) as his
assistant. Karchy, an anonymous outsider at his rich-kid school, finds the job much
to his liking with its lavish pay, short hours, and opportunities to bask in Magic's
aura of mega-coolness. There's a hitch, though: It turns out Karchy's main function
is to serve as a bagman for payola flowing between record promoters and his boss.
It's wrong, of course, but Karchy can't help wondering whether the good results,
including the ability to help his poor, rigorously honest father (Schell), don't
outweigh the negatives of the pissant offense. And so he faces one of youth's central
dilemmas: how seriously to take the truth-as-ultimate-good homilies laid down by
one's elders, especially in the face of massive evidence suggesting that lies are
the grease that keep civilization's gears turning? Bacon, with his oily hair, gaunt
face, and crooked smile that identifies him as one of the lucky few who gets life's
joke, is an overwhelming force calling Karchy to cross over to The Gray Side. Influences
on the other side are his Old World, old-school dad and Diney (Flockhart, from the
Ally McBeal TV show), a sympathetic older girl who recognizes the delicate cusp he's
riding. And that's your story. No breasts, no blood, no Nazi beasts. Just consistently
fine acting, adroit and assured directing and, yes, pitch-perfect writing by an artist
with much to prove and the real (if underused) talent to do it. Rusty says check
it out.
3.0 stars
--Russell Smith
Full Length Reviews
Telling Lies in America 
Telling Lies in America 
Capsule Reviews
Telling Lies in America 
Other Films by Guy Ferland
The Babysitter 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Grace of My Heart 
Work 
Vanya on 42nd Street 
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