Not Fade Away opens with a brief black and white scene of a young Mick Jagger and Keith Richards meeting on a train before cutting, now in color, to its story of a group of high school guys in the New Jersey suburbs who form a band of their own at the same time. Doug, played by John Magaro, awakens to the power of rock when he hears The Beatles' first hit on the radio and yearns to join a band he sees at his high school because of the popularity (and girls) that come with performing. We’re told by a voice over narrator – his younger sister – from the get go that this is a story about the band, but the narrative doesn’t bear this out. It keeps dropping the band’s fate to follow Doug as he moves through and comes of age in the turbulent decade. It’s a relief that Chase drops the voice over for most of the movie – simply asserting, with old TV footage of The Rolling Stones, that rock music’s trajectory ran parallel to that of Doug’s band is didactic and unsubstantiated if you don’t actually show it. And the sister barely functions as a character in the story. Why is she the one guiding us through it? But when he brings it back at the end, it moves from annoying to simultaneously grating and silly.
But the story of Doug and company proves little more engaging when Chase gets down to showing it. At no point are we made to understand who Doug is and why we should care about him. Along with Eugene and Wells, his bandmates, he never moves beyond a teenage self-absorption and immaturity that quickly grow tiresome. Far from quotidian, the trials and tribulations of these kids are vain and boring – Not Fade Away wants to romanticize them, but if that’s what the 60s offered then I fail to grasp what the fuss is about. The film also tries to set up a conflict between Doug and his father, Pat, (James Gandolfini), a blue-collar Italian-American angered at his son’s embrace of long hair and anti-war attitudes.Yet this material is spotty and melodramatic – it doesn’t follow up on the consequences of this dispute, just as Magaro, who reads every line like a whiny stoner, fails to convince you that Doug’s stances run anything beyond skin deep. Moreover, it’s inconsistent: for most of the picture Doug’s dad practically disowns him, but Pat turns teary-eyed later when his son moves to California. Chase hints that this transformation is the result of Pat’s getting cancer, yet he doesn’t dramatize this shift enough to make it believable or compelling.
James Gandolfini & John Magaro |
Chase keeps picking up and dropping these narrative threads so that nothing adds up in the end. Meanwhile, the characters and actors playing them also don’t hold much interest. Dominque McElligott tries to make Joy a fascinating flower child, and she might have succeeded if Chase presented her as anything more than a stereotype. Jack Huston (grandson of the great John Huston) is the prissy Eugene, and goes over the top in his big scene with Magaro. Brad Garrett, from Everybody Loves Raymond, is effective in a bit part as a music business executive who tells the band what we’ve known all along: that they’re not going far with the attitude they’ve got. Gandolfini is not given much to work with, but he does have one scene with Magaro that draws you in – when Pat confesses to Doug at a restaurant that he’s contemplated leaving his wife for another woman. The writing is not particularly revealing, but as Gandolfini plays it, we begin to sense something like depth. You can’t say that about much else in the movie.
– Nick Coccoma is a Master of Divinity candidate at the Boston College School of Theology and Ministry. He holds an M.A. in philosophy from Boston College, and a B.A. in theatre from the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, MA. A native of Cooperstown, NY, he also taught religion at the Nativity Preparatory School, a tuition-free, Jesuit middle school serving boys from low-income families in Boston.
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