Charlie
Bartlett
Starring: Anton Yelchin,
Robert Downey Jr., Hope Davis
Directed by: Jon Poll (debut)
Written by: Gustin Nash
(debut)
By Kiko
Martinez
If anyone
is trying to remember where they’ve seen actor Anton Yelchin,
chances are you first spotted him in the 2006 teenage
crime drama “Alpha Dog” as a kid who is kidnapped for a
debt owned by his older brother. Although the film
unsuccessfully tries to balance itself between
hard-hitting biopic and care-free street speech, much of the
well-acted true-life story comes in part from the young
actors who give the movie its spotty emotional spark. If
anyone does it the best, it’s Yelchin.
Here, the
kid plays the titular character in
“Charlie Bartlett.” Yelchin is a classic-looking talent
reminiscent of Anthony Michael Hall in “The Breakfast
Club” and Matthew Broderick in “Ferris Bueller’s Day
Off,” which is why he works so well as the extremely
likable lead character. Problem is that “Barlett’ isn’t
a John Hughes film and it's evident Yelchin is starring in a
first-time film for both the director (Jon Poll) and
writer (Gustin Nash).
It’s not to
say that “Bartlett” isn’t a worthy attempt. The story
revolves around a prep high school student who finds his
true calling in life when he appoints himself as a
psychiatrist and prescription drug dealer at his new
school.
When Charlie
is expelled from his "nth" private institution for selling
fake IDs to his classmates, his mother, Marilyn (Davis),
who has some issues of her own, decides public education
is her son’s final chance to clean up his act. Charlie
isn’t a troublesome kid at all. Actually, he is
respectful, friendly and an overall nice guy. But with
some concerns in his home life (his father is
incarcerated), he has no other choice than to express
himself and draw attention in any way he can.
Peddling
pills, which he has received from his shrink, from the
boys bathroom quickly makes Charlie a popular person to
know at his suburbia high school. Where he once was the
dweeby new guy who wore a crested sports coat and was
picked on by the rebellious bully, Charlie reaches iconic status on campus and has everyone's
head turning, especially alcoholic Principal Gardner (Downey Jr.), whose
daughter Susan (Kat Dennings) he has started to
date.
Although it
manages to stay away from more of the obvious and
shallow stereotypes that plague teenage comedies today,
“Bartlett” really can’t decide what type of film it
wants to be. As a quirky indie flick, it’s no
“Rushmore.” As a laborious drama, the script doesn’t
support its full intentions and leaves its characters
scraping to project their personalities in the waning
moments. Sadly, it doesn't occur soon enough.
Who is
Charlie Bartnett anyway? Yelchin might have his
Natalie-Portman-by-way-of-“Garden State” moments, but
there’s only so much a few eccentricities can uncover
about our leading man. Grade: C