Telling Lies In America (1997)
Brad Renfro, Calista Flockhart, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Kevin Bacon, Maximilian Schell ... (see more) , Paul Dooley
Joe Eszterhas (formulaic screenwriter of many overpaid projects, most infamously Basic Instinct and Showgirls) somewhat redeems himself with this semi-autobiographical story. His mouthpiece is Karchy Jonas (Brad Renfro), a Hungarian-born immigrant (like Eszterhas himself) growing up in Cleveland in ... (read more) Joe Eszterhas (formulaic screenwriter of many overpaid projects, most infamously Basic Instinct and Showgirls) somewhat redeems himself with this semi-autobiographical story. His mouthpiece is Karchy Jonas (Brad Renfro), a Hungarian-born immigrant (like Eszterhas himself) growing up in Cleveland in 1960. His pop (Maximilian Schell) works hard to send Karchy to an expensive high school, where Karchy is ostracized by the rich kids and labors to find acceptance. Into town walks itinerant rock DJ Billy Magic (Kevin Bacon), the quintessence of cool with a dark charm. Magic needs a teen to run errands for him (mostly carrying payola envelopes), so he hosts a "High School Hall of Fame" contest to help him find an assistant. Karchy, who idolizes Magic, wins the contest by forging signatures of his classmates on postcards. Magic knows of Karchy's deception and is intrigues by it, as that is the kind of dishonesty he's looking for in his assistant. Karchy's lying grows into a major character trait, forcing the kid into many difficult social situations, not the least of which involves government officials investigating the slippery Magic for payola and threatening to jeopardize Karchy's family's citizenship status if he doesn't cooperate. Although no less a formula plot than other Eszterhas stuff, this one's lifted a bit by the director's personal connection to the story and by a great, charismatic performance by Kevin Bacon. Much more could be written about the connection between lying and storytelling, and fending for oneself in the mendacious jungles of Hollywood, but suffice it to say that Karchy eventually grows up to write Showgirls. --Jim Gay
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PG-13, 101 min.
Directed by:
Guy Ferland
Release Date: Oct 17, 1997
DVD Release Date: Dec 18, 2001
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I see some people can't stand this movie, think it's awful. I saw it years ago and just watched it again. I love Brad Renfro. And I like the movie. It's different. It's interesting. And I thought it was cute. That's just my opinion. :) Oh, an... (read more) I see some people can't stand this movie, think it's awful. I saw it years ago and just watched it again. I love Brad Renfro. And I like the movie. It's different. It's interesting. And I thought it was cute. That's just my opinion. :) Oh, and I liked the soundtrack!
With help from talented young director Ferland and a sublime performance from Kevin Bacon, Eszterhas has created a gentle and affecting ode to universal growing-up conflicts within a beautifully rendered evocation of a specific time and place.
I don't have much to say about this movie, other than I love it. Brad Renfro and Kevin Bacon both do amazing acting jobs. It's easy to fall in love with Karchy Jonas. Great soundtrack, too.
Interesting from a radio perspective, but not a Top 100 film.
A fair depiction of a young immigrant's infatuation with the American Dream. Kevin Bacon makes you hate him and Brad Renfro is very convincing (minus the accent) as the young man wrapped up in the dirty business of the music industry in the 1960s.
Kevin Bacon bugs me in about anything he does, but Brad Renfro more than makes up for that. Brownie points for the Cleveland representation. The music is pretty good, too.
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