| Alternating
between serious drama and comic absurdity, Charlie Bartlett
never settles on a consistent mood, which in turn mixes
the messages it attempts to deliver. At times the comedy
works well, and at others the heartfelt drama attains
admirable poignancy, but as a whole the film never reaches
an equilibrium that demands emotional participation.
Bartlett is a passive movie, one that requires nothing
from its audience, but also gives little. Not without
an authenticity in portraying the habits and pandemonium
of youth, it satisfies in the end with a feeling of
accomplishment, but doesn’t offer the remembrance
of a more emotional involvement.
Charlie Bartlett (Anton Yelchin) is a high school troublemaker,
not one purposely out to cause mayhem, but one driven
by his ceaseless quest to be needed. After being kicked
out of every private school in the city, Charlie winds
up at Western Summit Public High School where he immediately
finds himself outcast once again. Ignored by the popular
kids and bullied by the bullies, Bartlett devises a
plan to garner the attention he desperately seeks. Working
with bully-turned-business partner Murphy (Tyler Hilton),
Charlie sets up a psychiatry office out of the boys’
bathroom and begins advising those with problems and
prescribing pills from the limitless supply he acquires
from his own personal shrink. Finding his calling by
trying to fix others’ emotional predicaments,
Bartlett seems to have finally attained the popularity
he’s always wanted, but things begin to spiral
out of control when the suspicious Principal Gardner
(Robert Downey Jr.) starts to wise up to his games and
young Charlie falls in love with Gardner’s daughter
Susan (Kat Dennings).
Anton Yelchin turns in an enthusiastic performance
as the soft-spoken Charlie Bartlett and creates as likeable
a character as the script allows. His motives and excuses
(he’s just a kid after all) often conflict with
truly identifying with this rushed-into-adulthood, wanna-be
psychiatrist, but when reality isn’t inexplicably
working in his favor, his trials and triumphs garner
a more deserved appreciation. Kat Dennings plays an
adequate love interest but never surpasses the confines
of her character’s stereotypes. Both young stars
are outshone by the ever-entertaining Robert Downey
Jr. whose quirky nature makes for a rather unexpected
principal, but an engaging one nonetheless. Hope Davis
also steals the scenes she appears in with her troubled-to-the-point-of-carefree-insanity
wealthy mother that means well but lacks any parental
disciplinary fortitude.
The primary downfall to Charlie Bartlett’s comedy-drama
structure is that it doesn’t balance the two genres
with the realistic appropriateness required to sustain
its more authentic approach to portraying high school
life. Initially it attempts to be flat-out comedy, with
the introduction of estranged characters, capricious
high school shenanigans and general youth mischievousness
- and then sharply shifts to serious drama. The predicament
Bartlett will face is finding its audience. Teens that
are attracted by the zany trailer will undoubtedly be
disappointed by the time the anti-drug, anti-promiscuity
singing montage occurs towards the conclusion, and adults
won’t have the patience for the fantastical portrayal
of adolescent angst. While some pieces may have general
appeal, not enough of it can cater to one demographic
adequately.
Charlie Bartlett retains the more realistic endeavors
of misguided youth, but allows its comedic antics to
constantly veer the film away from such studious precision.
The majority of conflicts, while carefully realized,
end up working in Charlie’s favor far too easily
and the charming sincerity rapidly diminishes. Our protagonist
overcomes adversity with hard work no doubt, but also
relies heavily on the money readily available to him
– something most other fictitious aspiring instigators
must achieve without. It’s certainly easier to
accomplish things when you’re rich, but such generous
financing could have been overlooked had the alternating
bouts of humor and seriousness not hindered the realism
so laboriously pursued.
- The Massie Twins
Read The Massie Twins Exclusive Interview with Director
Jon Poll HERE.
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