how to build a board that might send you skating away
by Douglas Messerli
Matthew Francis Johnson and Ryan Nordin
(screenplay), Ryan Nordin (director) Scraps / 2024 [27 minutes]
The new boy in a Montana town, Gus Shepard (Peder
Lindell), in a 2003 landscape, sketches the local skateboarder boys on the sly,
drawing the attention, at first, of only the female skater girl (Julia Sparr),
who warns him to keep away from the boys who, she argues, share only a few
brain cells.
Frankly,
we know the story already, and might leave it there were it not for the
absolutely wondrous skateboarding scenes in this wistful western drama located
in a world we might otherwise seldom ever visit.
Sure
enough, he discovers that the beautiful skateboard Gus is attempting to ride is
something he made by hand. It’s obviously love at first sight, if not for the
boy the object which the boy has been attempting to ride. Sexuality sizzles
through the air like the lightening. Besides, he’s just created the magical engine
from simple wooden “scraps,” hence the film’s title. Wow, how did he do this.
Our cute skater boy simply has to try it out! And the former Minnesota boy is
perfectly pleased to help his new friend to explore what he has to offer.
Long, blond-haired beauty Gus might not have a
very fulfilling relationship with his uncle, but he certainly does know how to
draw up a piece of wood to convert into another similar skateboard—he is, after
all, an artist—and the next morning, after a lot of midwestern coffee, he is
able to take his uncle’s sawed off woodscraps in hand, sand them down, and
begin to create another of his handmade skateboards.
Well,
not immediately! First he needs to glue up the relationship with Bridger, along
with the scraps he steals from his uncles’ workshop. Uncle and nephew are
simply making a remarkable homemade chair, but Gus, privately, is seeking out
someone to sit there. Gus invites his new friend to visit the “bigger” than
imagined “shop,” where the boys agree to teach one another.
Discovering his new friend’s sketch book, Bridger demands a drawing of
himself, which, of course, changes everything. The former voyeur is now
required to be an active artist in their relationship. Boys beware, this little
film is going somewhere dangerous in the isolationist Western world in which
they exist.
Something has shifted when Bridger returns, shocked by the fact that his
new friend has gotten the hottest girl in the town to actually talk to him.
Time to
drop my hand and move on into the mist of this gay fantasy. The scraps of wood
are beginning to designate, break into pieces and fall apart in the obvious
reality of the world in which Gus now exists.
The two
take in a usual town party, drink a lot, and finally meet up in reality. When
Gus asks what his new friend really wants, everything is laid out very nicely
in a heteronormative reality that forces him to realize that despite his
thwarted love, this beautiful boy is not the one for him. Even Bridger has
argued that he needs to move away from the delimited possibilities of rural
live. But Bridger’s own dreams make it clear that Gus cannot remain in the
space into which he has by accident been dropped. Bridger’ dreams are when Gus
asks him what would give his live more meaning: “I want to get a good job. Make
some money. Buy a cool car. Probably a girlfriend too, right?”
The “American
Dream” has never before seemed so dreary. We are in Trumpland, and there is no
escape.
But even
this lost boy has to ask himself, does he really want those things, trophies his
parents have which apparently haven’t given them much happiness. Bridger knows
what he really wants as he turns to Gus to say as the closeted males always
excuse themselves from making the move they are so desperate to take: “Gus, if
you were a girl, I’d kiss you right now.”
End of
story. Moving forward in small town USA is truly impossible unless you are,
like Tara, a courageous being. It is an impossible motion for most human beings
in a world, particularly, which doesn’t even want to admit to the full world of
human and animal sex.
If Nordin’s short film might first seem like a
work made up of bits and pieces, the shards of wood of so many films left
behind, I suggest you watch it more carefully, as I did this third time around.
Los Angeles, February 15, 2025
Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog (February 2025).
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