|
WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
First Love, Last Rites, directed by Jesse Peretz, from a short
story by Ian McEwan
A refreshing change from Hollywood's image of youth
By Richard Phillips
2 July 1998
First Love, Last Rites, the first feature by New York
director and former member of the Lemon Heads rock band, Jesse
Peretz, is a sensuous, humorous and pleasantly understated story
of the progress of a first-love relationship between two college-age
youth.
The lovers, Sissel (Natasha Gregson Wagner) and Joey (Giovanni
Ribisi) live together in a one-room shack in a fishing village
in Louisiana's bayou country. While social life is virtually non-existent
and job prospects equally bleak, the two adolescents are passionately
in love and, at first, unfazed by their limited future in the
small town.
Joey, originally from New York is utterly absorbed by Sissel
and appears prepared to break all his connections with the life
he led in the city. Sissel, determined to distance herself from
her separated parents, is equally enraptured by Joey. He offers
an alternative to the mind-numbing atmosphere in the town.
Their passion however begins to falter under the pressure of
constant demands for attention by Sissel's younger brother Adrian,
the bickering between Sissel's separated parents and the cloying
and introverted atmosphere in the socially depressed town.
At night, the couple are frequently disturbed by a rat scratching
inside the walls of the one-room shack. This unsettling sound
comes to symbolise the tensions developing in their relationship.
Reluctant for Joey to meet her estranged parents, Sissel finally
introduces him to Harry, her father. A Vietnam veteran, he persuades
Joey to join him in what he claims will be a major money-making
venture -- eel fishing in the bayous. Harry's get-rich-quick scheme,
one of many, is doomed to fail.
Sissel, impatient with her father's interference and Joey's
naivete, begins to realise that the couple cannot maintain their
blissful existence forever. She decides to take a job in a local
cane crushing plant.
With their sexual curiosity satisfied and passions spent, the
lovemaking gradually gives way to disillusionment, boredom, insecurity
and then irritation with each other. The relationship, like Harry's
hapless business scheme, falls apart.
Subtle and convincing performances from its principal players,
Giovanni Ribisi, who starred in Richard Linklater's Suburbia,
and Natasha Gregson Wagner, ensure First Love, Last Rites
is a credible film.
Peretz, who neither glorifies nor patronises the youth, skillfully
and with compassion captures their hopes, aspirations and confusions.
The Joey and Sissel characters represent a refreshing break from
the larger-than-life characters manufactured by Hollywood or the
cold-blooded, street-wise youth created by numerous politically
correct directors.
Much more, of course, can and should be said about the enormous
difficulties facing young people today. Poverty, unemployment,
drug addiction and a whole range of other social problems guarantee
that few enjoy the languid moments shared by this young couple
in the Louisiana bayous. Although one hopes Peretz will turn his
attention to more complex and substantive themes in the future,
the film nevertheless remains a sympathetic and at times beautiful
depiction of some of the emotional obstacles encountered in the
passage from adolescence to adulthood.
See Also:
An interview with Jesse Peretz, director
of First Love, Last Rites
[2 July 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |