My Entire High School
Sinking Into the Sea *** ½ / *****
Directed by: Dash Shaw.
Written by: Dash Shaw.
Starring: Jason Schwartzman (Dash),
Lena Dunham (Mary), Reggie Watts (Assaf), Maya Rudolph (Verti), Susan Sarandon
(Lunch Lady Lorraine), Thomas Jay Ryan (Principal Grimm), Alex Karpovsky
(Drake), Louisa Krause (Gretchen), John Cameron Mitchell (Brent Daniels),
Matthew Maher (Senior Kyle), Keith Poulson (Senior Craig).
My
Entire High School Sinking Into the Sea takes a lot of influences – both in
terms of its visual look and its storytelling, combines them all together to
make an animated film that can sometimes feel patchwork, but it’s always
interesting to look at, and entertaining. The film runs a brisk 75 minutes, so
there’s not much time to get bored, and while that means the characters are
thinly written, the story moves quick enough to keep things from getting bogged
down. It’s not a great animated film, but it’s a great first animated film for
Writer/director Dash Shaw – a graphic novelist making his transition into the
movies. He plays it safe in many ways, just working on making sure everything
works. I hope a second film from him will take more chances.
The
film centers on a high school sophomore named Dash (presumably based on the
writer/director, but voiced by Jason Schwartzman in a way that makes him seem
like if Max Fischer was animated) – who on the first day of school has a fight
with his best (only) friend Assaf (Reggie Watts) because the editor of the
school paper, Verti (Maya Rudolph) clearly favors Assaf in more than one way.
On a quest to get his permanent record, Dash ends up in the bowels of the
school, where he comes across paper work that shows that the school new
auditorium – built at the top of the school – has made the whole building
dangerously unstable, and that even a small earthquake could send the school
off a cliff, and crashing into the ocean. Of course, no one listens to Dash,
and of course, that is precisely what happens. Dash has to team up with Assaf,
Verti, sophomore class President Mary (Lena Dunham) and a helpful lunch lady
(Susan Sarandon) to try and reach the top of the school so they can be rescued,
before the whole school sinks.
The
film is basically what you get if you animated a mishmash of John Hughes and
The Poseidon Adventure or The Towering Inferno). The animation style is often
rudimentary on the surface – the characters aren’t Don Hertzfeldt stick figures
by any means, but they aren’t overly detailed either. Shaw does excel in the
backgrounds however – often creating intense, flashing room that leave our
heroes in striking silhouette. His other influences ranger from old school
Nintendo games – the ones where a character stutters across the screen to fight
bad guys, but only have one move, to a deliberate reference to A Charlie Brown
Christmas. The result is actually quite charming – as if a high school
sophomore’s doodle book came to life along with his fantasies of the school
being destroyed, and all his enemies being vanquished.
I
liked the vocal work in the movie as well – even if, for the most part, Shaw
seemed to cast people to do things right in the centre of their sweet spot.
Still, it works – and the film does as a whole as well. It’s fun and funny, and
just as you start to feel the film flagging a little bit, it’s over. I look
forward to seeing what Shaw does next – he’s made a very good first film, but I
think there’s something more waiting to come out.
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