Review

The Young Unknowns (2003)

EW's GRADE
B+

Details Limited Release: Apr 11, 2003; Rated: R; Length: 87 Minutes; Genre: Drama; With: Devon Gummersall and Arly Jover

 FOREVER \'YOUNG\' Bailey kills time The Young Unknowns, Eion Bailey
FOREVER 'YOUNG' Bailey kills time

There's a shocking, casual quality to the self-destructive narcissism of the pretty, petty kids squandering their lives in the L.A. sunshine of The Young Unknowns. Lounging at his father's swank Hollywood house while Dad is off making a movie in London, Charlie (''My So-Called Life'''s Devon Gummersall) fills the emptiness in his long, aimless days by cruelly belittling his girlfriend Paloma (Arly Jover), roughhousing with his hanger-on buddy Joe (Eion Bailey), and treating Cassandra (''ER'''s Leslie Bibb), an in-over-her-head new girl in town, with such mirthless disdain that the coked-up colt retreats deep behind the fortress of drugs she has stashed in her purse.

This raw and potent feature debut of writer-director Catherine Jelski is by no means the first indie to pin a generation of wriggling credit-card brats to the screen (think ''Igby Goes Down''), and it says nothing new about parental negligence among the rich and name-dropping. But from her very first scene -- a David Hockney-esque expanse of L.A. swimming-pool blue -- Jelski decisively establishes a dispassionate insider's voice. The miseries that accrue for this foursome during their wasted time together are stupid, sad, and -- most intentionally disturbing of all -- unexceptional. The performances, meanwhile, especially those of Gummersall and Bibb, are impressively natural and uncensored.

Originally posted Apr 18, 2003 Published in issue #705 Apr 18, 2003 Order article reprints
You Might Also Like

Add your comment

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. An asterisk * indicates a required field.

500 characters remaining
Advertisement