DIRECTOR
David Lynch
SCREENWRITERS
John
Roach
Mary Sweeney
PRODUCERS
Neal Edelstein
Alain Sarde
Mary Sweeney
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Freddie Francis
MUSIC
Angelo Badalamenti
EDITOR
Mary Sweeney
CAST
Richard Farnsworth (Alvin Straight)
Sissy Spacek (Rose Straight)
Jane Galloway Heitz (Dorothy)
Joseph A. Carpenter (Bud)
Dan Flannery (Doctor Gibbons)
Jennifer Edwards-Hughes (Brenda)
Ed Grennan (Pete)
Everett McGill (Tom)
Anastasia Webb (Crystal)
Barbara Robertson (Deer Woman)
Leroy Swadley (Bar Patron)
Harry Dean Stanton (Lyle Straight)
MPAA rating: G
Running
time: 111m
U.S. release: October 15, 1999
Video availability: VHS - DVD
Other David
Lynch films
reviewed on this website:
- Dune
- Lost
Highway
- Mulholland
Drive
- Twin
Peaks: Fire Walk With Me
- Wild
at Heart
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David Lynch began this decade
with a triumph (Twin Peaks) and is finishing it with another
one. The Straight Story is based on the true account of
Alvin Straight (played here by Richard Farnsworth), a 73-year-old
Iowan who sets out to visit his long-estranged brother Lyle,
who's recently had a stroke. Alvin can't drive -- his eyes are
too far gone -- so he makes the journey on a John Deere lawnmower,
pulling along a makeshift trailer where he sleeps and stores
his things.
Lynch is best known -- some would say most notorious -- for his
severe, very R-rated shockers exploring the nightside of human
sexuality and brutality: Blue Velvet, Wild
at Heart, Lost
Highway. Yet it isn't at all out of character for him
to do this 180-degree turn and make a becalmed, soothing ode
to rural life. Lynch, a Montana native, always comes across in
interviews as folksy and gee-whiz, despite the heart of darkness
beating in most of his work. It's not an ironic put-on; he really
is that way, and The Straight Story brings out a part
of him that he's maybe had to sneak sideways into some of his
other movies (Blue Velvet had its folksy moments).
The movie is exquisitely simple, near-plotless, as Alvin makes
his slow journey from Iowa to Wisconsin. As always, Lynch draws
the scenes out, letting them breathe, giving us time to drink
in the images. His measured pacing is completely organic to the
subject -- a 73-year-old man with two canes, travelling at about
five miles an hour on a 1966 lawnmower. We experience life as
Alvin does. The cars and trucks zooming by on the highway seem
like demons violating the rural space -- why are they in such
a hurry? There's a beautifully spooky moment when dozens of bicyclists
whoosh past Alvin in a bike race, looking like silent white aliens
streaking down the country road, like something out of Close
Encounters. Don't be fooled by the G rating: This is probably
the first true art film to come out under the Walt Disney banner.
Veteran actor Farnsworth, who was actually six years older than
Alvin when he played the part, gives a stunning near-silent performance.* This is a movie of few words (I'd be surprised
if the script, by Mary Sweeney and John Roach, came in at much
more than 60 pages), with a hero of few words. Lynch and his
great cinematographer Freddie Francis get a lot of mileage out
of the countryside -- the deep blue sky, the rustling corn, the
rusty old farm machines chugging in the fields -- but the movie
is all in Farnsworth's weathered face, his way of looking at
someone and understanding all he needs to understand. "How
far along are you?" he asks a sullen runaway girl. She isn't
showing yet; he just knows.
The Straight Story also gives Lynch an opportunity to
put slightly askew characters on the screen; as always, he's
not really laughing at them -- he respects them, enjoys them
for who they are. There's the set of twin mechanics who fix Alvin's
mower; one of them has a strange bandage on his cheek. There's
the woman who keeps hitting deer with her car no matter how hard
she tries not to. There's the hardware-store clerk who's moved
nearly to tears when Alvin asks to buy the man's beloved "grabber."
Most radiantly, there's Alvin's daughter Rose (Sissy Spacek,
who goes way back with Lynch but has never acted for him before),
a somewhat slow woman with a vocal hesitancy that hides her essential
level-headedness.
This is the only G-rated movie Lynch has directed and probably
ever will direct. For that reason, some parents may think it's
a movie they can take their little kids to. While there's absolutely
nothing kids shouldn't see in The Straight Story,
there's also very little to interest them. The movie is really
for mature audiences, and it's for patient audiences, too. If
a meditative pace isn't your thing, you'd better pass. But for
some of us who find subtle, hushed, easygoing movies an immensely
refreshing change of pace from today's usual bang-bang, The
Straight Story hits the spot. Leaving the theater, a friend
remarked that he'd enjoyed the film, but that nobody would ever
say "That movie rocks." "No," I said, "it
rocks quietly."
* Which
turned out to be Farnsworth's swan song -- racked by the pain
of the cancer that was killing him, he committed suicide about
a year after the movie was released. It makes you all the more
amazed at the quality of the work he was able to turn in despite
his pain -- and what a performance to go out on.
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