Donnie Darko (2001)
Donnie Darko is derivative
26 October 2001
Donnie Darko is… what? That's what the filmmakers want people

to be asking each other. An air of mystery surrounds the ad

campaign. Is Donnie Darko a troubled high school boy? Is he the

demonic, shadowy character depicted on the poster? Is he a hero,

or a loser?

Elements of all those things are in Donnie Darko, who is

personified by Jake Gyllenhall ("October Sky"). Gyllenhall is the

real standout here, managing to portray this difficult, mostly

unlikable character with commendable depth.

And "depth" is what this movie thinks it's all about. What lies

beneath the veneer of American suburbia? Donnie is in psychotherapy, and even though he takes medication he still has

disturbing hallucinations involving "Frank", a big bunny-man who

looks like a cross between Harvey, the Jackalope, and Satan, and

who tells him the world will end in 28 days. Donnie's lackluster

new girlfriend, Gretchen (Jena Malone, "Stepmom"), is living under

some sort of witness protection program ("Gretchen" is not her

real name), hiding from her psychotic dad, who stabbed her mom

four times in the chest. Donnie's clean-cut science teacher, Dr.

Monnitoff (Noah Wylie, "A Few Good Men"), secretly believes in

time travel, and the possibility of such via random wormholes. Jim

Cunningham (Patrick Swayze, "The Green Dragon") is a freakishly

loving, kindly, and understanding self-help guru, whose fancy

mansion seems very out of place in the small, middleclass town.

There are lots of interesting characters (and some not so

interesting due to underdevelopment) and the plot does raise

some thought-provoking questions. Too bad it answers them far

too quickly. I saw the ending, which I imagine was supposed to

have major impact, coming almost right from the beginning (one

line of dialog could have been deleted to prevent this). I told myself

that maybe it didn't matter, since this film is obviously intended for

teenagers. But that's not fair; "talking down" to an audience is

never an excuse for not paying attention to detail.

If this movie was intended to be your typical teen flick, I'd cut it a lot

more slack -- but the director (first-timer Richard Kelly, who also

wrote the screenplay) wants you to believe Donnie Darko is "the

story of Holden Caulfield, resurrected in 1988 by the spirit of Phillip

K. Dick." Therefore, it must be held to a higher standard than

American Pie 2.

There seems to be no reason to set this film in the 1980's (except

that it's the era in which the director himself was a teen), and there

are lots of strange things with dates that don't pan out. The 28

days thing, for example -- is that supposed to signify the menstrual

period? After all, blood is spilt on the 28th day. It's never really

defined, though.

Although it claims to be very original, much of Donnie Darko is

derivative. First there's the six-foot bunny following the main

character, which no one else can see; then there are absolute

copies of the water-creatures from "The Abyss" floating around;

and there's the absurd, but oh-so-hip Tarantinoesque dialog

section, in which Donnie and his friends discuss whether or not

Smurfette is getting it on with the other Smurfs.

Photographed by Steven Poster (who won an ASC Award for his

work on Ridley Scott's "Someone to Watch Over Me," and whose

work is usually quite good), Donnie Darko is not only dark and

harshly shadowed (Drew Barrymore, who plays an English

teacher, looks like a ghoul in one bright sunlight / deep shadow

scene), but there's also an awful, dull flatness to it all. One scene,

apparently shot "day for night" is particularly bad.

There are certain elements in Donnie Darko that work, and there

are some flashes of meaning here and there. Richard Kelly might

be a director to watch for -- maybe Donnie Darko is just a rough

draft. But it's much too rough to be anything more.
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