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Speedway
Junky (1999)
For
a supposedly bunch of cultured, educated, intelligent,
and especially creative folks, gay people seem to make
the same movie over and over and over. "Speedway Junky"
is old news. Writer/Director Nickolas Perry mixes up
"Midnight Cowboy," "Where the Day Takes You," "johns,"
and an ABC Afterschool Special and comes up with a concoction
so bland that you'll find yourself pushing it around
on your plate, wondering what to do with it.
The story focuses on a naive county boy runaway (Jesse
Bradford) who comes to Las Vegas to strike it rich so
that he can become a race car driver. Of course, he
is practically robbed, raped and beaten by the time
the first reel is over. The film's most nauseating segment
concerns a businessman who picks up the young boy for
obvious reasons. Of course, Jesse is blind to the whole
scenario until it gets real obvious. It's revolting
stereotypical crap.
But Jesse is fortunate enough to meet young Jordan Brower,
a gay urban hustler who takes him under his wing. Jordan
has his sights on Jesse but he's such a sweet young
gay hustler that he wouldn't dream of forcing himself
on the other boy. They become fast friends when Jesse
gets the shit kicked out of him and Jordan nurses him
back to health, like the good homosexual teenage boy
that he is. Of course, Jesse is straight, so Jordan
is wasting his time here. Wow - how novel!
Along the way there is much more trash. Jonathan Taylor
Thomas plays the king of the strip, a teen hustler who
does it all if the price is right. Of course, the biggest
draw here is to see the wholesome milk-drinking TV star
say "fuck"and talk about taking it up the ass. Whoopie.
Thomas does the best he can, but he is relegated to
the backdrop of the Jesse/Jordan love story - or rather,
the lack thereof of it. Thomas also has to compete against
some of the worst acting in the world, brought forth
by Daryl Hannah, Tiffany Amber- Thiesen and some unknowns
who were unfortunate enough to be cast here. It's a
shambles.
If there is any savior of the piece, it is Brower who
does his absolute best here to bring his gay teen character
to life. He's might be quite good with the right director
and costars. The scenes between him and Hannah almost
work. A particularly good scene comes when Brower cries
in unrequited love while his friend Jesse makes it with
Hannah. The scenes are quick cut back and forth but
the heterosexual scene doesn't go far enough. We know
why Brower is in anguish, he is thinking of Jesse with
the older woman. The scene with Jesse and Hannah, however,
is so dull, so lackluster, so bland that it doesn't
really work. Brower would be thinking of his love interest
in bed with the woman, not just him kissing her tenderly.
It just doesn't go far enough. It doesn't have enough
oomph. It's too damn Hollywood "safe." Too bad Brower
works so hard for almost no payoff. That's his problem
in the whole movie. He's the only one on screen with
any fucking chops.
Perry somehow talked Gus Van Sant into producing this
piece of drivel. Hope Gus did it as a tax write-off.
Why would he produce a watered-down drab rip-off of
his own "My Own Private Idaho?" "Speedway Junky" is
pure soap opera. There is no spark here, no joy, no
fun and nothing new. Same shit, different film. Perry
doesn't even seem to be trying. There is no glimmering
in his direction. There is not one interesting shot
(does the camera even move?) and definitely no unifying
theme or motif or visual sense. Even Las Vegas as a
backdrop looks bland. In many ways, it would be more
fun to sit in the 4 Queens casino on the strip and drop
quarters in the slot machines than to sit through this
sorry waste of film. But occassionally you hit a small
payoff, and Brower pops up with another good bit of
acting in an otherwise barren wasteland of lost, pointless
neon.
Notes: Also with Warren G., Erik Alexander Gavica (who
is particularly bad), Patrick Renna Music by Stan Ridgeway.
Produced by Golan/Globus Bradford's credits include
"Romeo + Juliet" and "Hackers." Brower's include TV's
"Teen Angel" and "The Big Green" (also with Renna).
Budget was $1 million. Shot in 24 days in the summer
of 1998. Exterior filmming in Vegas, interiors shot
in L.A.
Personal Notes: Seen on 8/28/99 as part of the Austin
Gay and Lesbian International Film Festival. The director,
an extremely nice man, was in attendance and did a Q&A
session. Among other tales was the story of hiring JTT.
Balthazar Getty had been hired to play the role of Steven
but showed up incapacitated and unable to stand, let
alone act. Perry was given 48 hours to find a new teenage
"name actor" or the film would be scraped. JTT was on
hiatus during the summer from "Home Improvement" and
accepted the role after being faxed pages of the script.
Perry did not write the cross cut scene where Bradford
and Hannah make love and Brower cries. He had those
as separate entities. The editor did this and showed
it to Perry who wisely saw it's genius.
Perry said that he thought of Brower's character as
a sort of saint but did not consciously act visually
on this idea. He said many people see religious imagery
in the film. I myself saw a scene where a hubcap in
the background was lit so that it became a halo over
a scene. Perry said this was not a conscious thing.
Perry said he had written many scripts about L.A. fringe
youth but none had sold. He made a short film called
"Must Be the Music" (shown at agliff in '96) which Van
Sant saw and liked. The director agreed to work with
Perry about the time he was coming off the phenomenal
"Good Will Hunting" which helped spark interest in his
script for "Speedway Junky" and got the ball rolling.
Perry said the only thing his producers required in
the film was a "car chase" scene to which he obliged.
Perry said his next project was that he was hired to
write a script about a rock star who fakes his own death
after his biggest hit so he can find the girl of his
dreams. Uck!
At this time, the film is still seeking a distributor.
Also in the attendance of the screening was Jim Fall,
who directed the film "Trick."
I saw a couple of people I have meet at agliff events
tonight, including a guy named John who stopped me in
the parking lot after the film. We discussed it for
about 45 minutes. He was very nice.
Report
Card
Script:
F
Acting: D+
Cinematography\Lighting: D-
Special Effects\Make Up:F
Music: D-
Final
Grade: D-
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