"-This is one of my favorite movies, no doubt..."
16 year old Lucas is different. He's more interested in the wonders of science and the
beauty of insects than he is in football and parties. Smaller and more intellectual than his
high school classmates, Lucas is always on the outside looking in. The he strikes up a
summer friendship with Maggie, the cute new girl in town. Thinking he's found a kindred
Spirit, Lucas begins to fall in love. But when school begins, Maggie starts hanging out
with the jocks and cheerleaders. Lucas feels more alone now than ever. When Maggie is
attracted to the football captain, Lucas decides he'll do anything to win her back.
Lucas is a honest and touching story. It proves that the best person to be is yourself.
The first loves of early adolescence are so powerful because they are not
based on romance, but on ideals. When they are 13 or 14, boys and girls do
not fall in love with one another because of all the usual reasons that are
celebrated in love songs; they fall in love because the other person is perfect.
Not smart or popular or good-looking, but perfect, the embodiment of all
good.
The very name of the loved one becomes a holy name, as you can see in
"Lucas," when the hero says, "Maggie. Is that short for Margaret?" And then
hugs himself to find that it is, because he suddenly realizes that Margaret is the
most wonderful name in all the world.
Everybody grows up, and sooner or later love becomes an experience that has
limits and reasons. "Lucas" is a movie that takes place before that happens. It is
about a very smart kid who looks a little too short and a little too young to be
in high school, and when he is told that, he nods and solemnly explains that he
is "accelerated."
One summer day, while riding his bike through a leafy green suburb north of
Chicago, he sees a red-haired girl practicing her tennis swing. He stops to
speak to her, and before long they are fast friends who sit cross-legged in the
grass, knees touching knees, and talk about things that begin with capital
letters, such as Life and Society and Art.
Lucas loves Maggie, but she is just a little older and more mature than him, and
has her eye on a member of the football team. Lucas believes, of course, that
the whole value system of football and cheerleaders and pep rallies is corrupt.
Maggie says she agrees. But how can she argue when the football hero notices
her, breaks up with his girlfriend and asks her if he can have a kiss?
To describe this situation is to make "Lucas" sound like just one more film
about teenage romance. But it would be tragic if this film would get lost in the
shuffle of "teenage movies." This is a movie that is as pure and true to the
adolescent experience as Truffaut's "The 400 Blows." It is true because it
assumes all of its characters are intelligent, and do not want to hurt one another,
and will refuse to go along with the stupid, painful conformity of high school.
The film centers on the character of Lucas, a skinny kid with glasses and a
shock of unruly hair and a gift for trying to talk himself into situations where he
doesn't belong. Lucas is played by Corey Haim, who was Sally Field's son in
"Murphy's Romance," and he does not give one of those cute little boy
performances that get on your nerves. He creates one of the most
three-dimensional, complicated, interesting characters of any age in any recent
movie. If he can continue to act this well, he will never become a half-forgotten
child star, but will continue to grow into an important actor. He is that good.
But the film's other two major actors are just as effective. Kerri Green, who
was in "The Goonies," is so subtle and sensitive as Maggie that you realize she
isn't just acting; she understands this character in her heart. As the football
hero, Charlie Sheen in some ways has the most difficult role because we're
primed to see him in terms of cliches - the jock who comes along and wins the
heart of the girl. Sheen doesn't even remotely play the character that way. It is
a surprise to find that he loves Lucas, that he protects him from the goons at
school, that although he has won Maggie away from Lucas, he cares very
deeply about sparing the kid's feelings.
The last third of the movie revolves around a football game. So many recent
films have ended with the "big match" or the "big game" that my heart started to
sink when I saw the game being set up. Surely "Lucas" wasn't going to throw
away all its great dialogue and inspired acting on another formula ending?
Amazingly, the movie negotiates the football game without falling into
predictability. Lucas finds himself in uniform and on the field under the most
extraordinary circumstances. But they are plausible circumstances, and what
happens then can hardly be predicted.
There are a half-dozen scenes done so well that they could make short films of
their own. They include: the time Lucas and Maggie listen to classical music and
discuss her name; the scene between Maggie and the football hero in the high
school's laundry room; the scene in which Lucas is humiliated at a school
assembly and turns the situation to his advantage; the way in which he takes the
news that he will not be going to the dance with Maggie, and the last scene in
the movie, which is one of those moments of perfect vindication that makes you
want to cry.
"Lucas" was written and directed by David Seltzer, who obviously has put his
heart into the film. He also has used an enormous amount of sensitivity. In a
world where Hollywood has cheapened the teenage years into predictable
vulgarity, he has remembered how urgent, how innocent and how idealistic
those years can be. He has put values into this movie.
It is about teenagers who are learning how to be good to each other, to care,
and not simply to be filled with egotism, lust and selfishness, which is all most
Hollywood movies think teenagers can experience. "Lucas" is one of the year's
best films, and although its three stars are all teenagers, I doubt if anyone of any
age will give more sensitive and effective performances this year.
20th Century-Fox presents a film written and directed by David Seltzer and
produced by Lawrence Gordon and David Nicksay. Photographed by
Rey-naldo Villalobos. Music by Dave Grusin. Running time: 104 minutes.
Classified PG-13. At local theaters.