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Bobcat Goldthwait makes a daring assault in "World's
Greatest Dad" against our yearning to mythologize
the dead. But he loses his nerve just before the earth
is completely scorched. I have a notion his first
draft screenplay might have been unremittingly dark
and cynical. It might not have been "commercial."
This version may have a better chance. Audiences think
they like bleak pessimism, but they expect the plane
to pull out of its dive and land safely.
Robin Williams is the star, demonstrating once again
that he's sometimes better in drama than comedy. He
has that manic side he indulges, and he works better
(for me, anyway) when he's grounded. Here he plays
Lance, a high school teacher, the divorced father
of a loathsome teenager. His son dies by hanging,
a suicide, and becomes the object of a cult of veneration
and mourning at the school where he was a student
and his dad still teaches.
This premise is well-established because of a disturbingly
good performance by Daryl Sabara as Kyle, the disgusting
son. Kyle is a compulsive masturbator who makes no
effort to conceal his pastime from his father. At
school, he's a vulgar sexist, insulting girls in the
corridors. At all times he is as angry and hostile
as he can possibly be, and is genuinely disliked by
the student body -- with the sad exception of Andrew
(Evan Martin), his "friend" and victim.
Lance comes home to find his son has strangled himself.
He has loved the boy despite everything, and now he
attempts to rewrite the story of his death. He manufactures
misleading evidence for the police to find -- and
although he is a failed author with five rejected
novels in the drawer, he now finds his perfect genre
by forging a diary allegedly left behind by Kyle at
his death.
This diary he posts on the Internet, it goes viral
at the high school, and the student body is overtaken
with remorse about the way Kyle was treated. Soon
he becomes the deity of a death cult, led no doubt
by "Twilight" fans, and students start wearing
his photo. Lance is now seen as a heroic father.
The way this becomes an obsession is possibly the
real point of Goldthwait's film. There's nothing like
death to stir the herd instinct. For example, yes,
Michael Jackson was a creative and talented artist.
But was he as venerated a week before his death as
he was a week after? Would anyone have foreseen the
state funeral? What exactly did it mean when fans
staged an all-night vigil at Neverland? Some were
motivated by grief, more perhaps by a desire to participate
vicariously in fame. Like sports fanatics, they seek
identities through the objects of their adulation.
The Kyle cult becomes a tiger that Lance, the hero's
father, has to ride. As he passes through the corridors,
the path clears before him and a hush falls. He becomes
much more interesting to his girlfriend Claire (Alexie
Gilmore), a fellow teacher, who had shown alarming
signs of growing sweet on Mike (Henry Simmons), a
handsome, younger faculty member.
The only character who doubts the story about Kyle's
death and his diary is Andrew -- the only one who
knew him, and his onanism, at all well. Lance otherwise
triumphs as he creates a fake son in place of his
real son, and it all leads up to Kyle Clayton Day
at the school. It is quite true, as New York Times
critic Stephen Holden points out, that the phony death
story has brought out the better natures of the survivors.
My question is whether Goldthwait, the creator, after
all, of "Shakes the Clown," started out
with that intention. There is an inexorably black
satire somewhere inside "World's Greatest Dad,"
signaling to be saved.
By Roger Ebert
Chicago
Sun-Times, September 02, 2009
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