dreamers
by Douglas Messerli
Michael Ventura (screenplay), Robert
Dornhelm (director) Echo Park / 1985
Echo Park is
the kind of movie critics like to describe as "endearing," a small,
off-kilter film that overall does not quite hold together, but has charming
moments nonetheless. The film does have a great deal going for it: wonderful
props—a rambling old house ready, so it seems, to fall down the hill at any
moment, a lit-up pizza truck that looks like it's decked out for
Christmas—presumably all the creation of the film's art director Bernt Capra
(father of my Green Integer editor, Pablo Capra); a wonderful cast of characters,
including Susan Dey, Tom Hulce, Michael Bowen, Shirley Jo Finney, Timothy Carey
and the young Christopher Walker; an often heartfelt story; and a 1980s
backdrop of the then young and down-and-out Los Angeles neighborhood of Echo
Park, along with its scraggly palms and golden sunsets. The character types,
however, are just that, outsized stick-figures whose loony lifestyles make them
hard to believe; you know a film is a bit over-the-top when Cheech Marin plays
the film's so-called "straight" man!
May (Dey), a bartender-waitress at a dreary local pub, is having a hard
time of it, trying to keep life in order while staying a step ahead of her
quickly maturing son, Henry (Walker); to help raise money she determines to
rent out a room in her already over-cramped half of the dilapidated house.
Director Dornhelm brings out nearly every extreme character actor in Hollywood
as hopeful roommates before delivering up a local pizza boy, Jonathan (Hulce)
whose friendly face and clean looks gets May's attention. Next door to her is
August, an Austrian body-sculptor with dreams of becoming another Arnold
Schwarzenegger. In fact, each of these figures wants to become someone other
than they are—at least by trade. May wants to be an actress, and lamely expresses
that hope week after week by posting newspaper announcements: "Experienced
actress available for immediate roles." Jonathan quietly and moodily
writes songs. And August is torn between creating a machine to harness the
energy of actors' genes in order to renovate the worn out bodies of others and
seeking a career as a bit actor in television ads. Henry just wants to survive
the childhood through which he is struggling.
Of course, despite some initial resentments and hesitations, Jonathan
and Henry (whom he rechristens "Hank") eventually bond while
delivering pizzas throughout the neighborhood in his brightly lit-up truck. May
gets an audition and procures a job with a substantial wrinkle—the role is as a
party-going stripper! But, after a while and a few lessons from her employer,
Hugo (John Paragon), she gets used the job and even somewhat enjoys it. August,
the most ridiculous dreamer of them all actually gets a TV ad as a kind
Hun-like dragon slayer sprayed by Viking deodorant. Jonathan even gets a bit of
attention from a local band, but seems so passive that he cannot even sing his
song for them ("It's not finished yet.").
We can also expect, obviously, a few more serious setbacks. August is
turned away from an Austrian consulate party where he had hoped to meet his
hero, Schwarzenegger. When he is turned down in his attempt to make films
advertising his new invention by Syd (Marin) the owner of the local gym where
he works, he violently explodes and is arrested. And—we could see this one
coming a mile off—Jonathan and Hank deliver pizzas to a party where May is
already half-naked. The shock of seeing his mother actually doing what she
pretends is a performance, sends the boy into the streets with Jonathan and May
at the chase, the mother despairing of the damage she has done to her son.
Into this madhouse comes August's father, direct from Austria, having
been telephoned by the police upon his son's arrest. Encountering his son in
the midst of this insane gathering he raises his hand to slap August's face.
Suddenly writer and director take the group's dance into the mountains of
Austria with the adult characters loping through the pastures as if they were
attempting to channel Maria Van Trapp in The
Sound of Music. What are they trying to tell us, one must ask? Earlier in
the film, May, in conversation with August, admits that when she has sex she is
just "fucking," while when he has sex, he is, as he puts it,
"making love." The suggestion is that in his true madness, August is
the biggest dreamer of them all. Have these characters, accordingly, been
transported into the lunatic state of mind that August inhabits? Or is it
simply evidence that a bit of patriarchal control has been played out before
them, allowing them to restore their lives?
Echo Park is an endearing,
small, off-kilter film that does not quite hold together.
But here again, as I argue for this LA sub-genre, an outsider has found
his way among a society of misfits. Or perhaps the misfits have found their way
into the outsider's societal bliss.
Los Angeles, September 25, 2015
Reprinted from International Cinema Review (September 2015).




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