
KAT DENNINGS at The HOUSE BUNNY Movie Premiere August 20, 2008 in Westwood, California:
TAKING A WALK ON THE FILMIC SIDE, TRANSITING THE VINTAGE ROADS.
"Charlie Bartlett" is the directorial debut of editor Jon Poll after his short film The Tree (1982), an exercise in audiovisual expression exploring man's violence against nature through rhythm and figures. Now Poll's second film Something Borrowed (2008) is in pre-production. Charlie Bartlett's screenwriter Gustin Nash also penned the script for Youth in Revolt (2008) with Miguel Arteta.
In "Charlie Bartlett" teen popularity is a state of mind.
A pretty drama student, Susan Gardner (Kat Dennings), mistakes Charlie for a teacher when she sees him wearing a tie, and she is immediately attracted by his quirky manners, offhand remarks, and his skills in improvising theatre comedy. She is the daughter of the school's principal Nathan Gardner (Robert Downey Jr.), with whom she has a difficult relationship.
Maybe this unsatisfactory family bond is one of the reasons for the mutual attraction between Susan and Charlie. We learn that Charlie's father is locked up in prison due to a tax evasion conviction and his mother Marilyn Bartlett (Hope Davis) is a Klonopin-dependent, "invisible" nice mother who enjoys singing at the piano, "Those were the days..."
Looking for acceptance from the high school cliques, Charlie uses every session with his psychiatrist (to whom he confesses a dream fantasy: "I kind of have this one fantasy. It's just this fantasy of me stepping out on stage, and there are all these kids out in the audience, chanting my name, like I'm a rock star, you know.") to get prescription drugs (Ritalin, Xanax, Zoloft, etc.) which he then sells to his troubled classmates at a bargain price.
He's also sensitive and has romantic intentions toward a blonde, promiscuous cheerleader, Whitney Drummond (Megan Park).
Feeling isolated, he goes to the boy's room and Charlie "the doctor/actor" gives him this recipe: "Murph, start him on 50 milligrams of Zoloft and half a milligram of Xanax as needed." This is an acid moment that serves as a parody of an adult world of zany psychotherapy and pharmaceutical frenzy.
Susan gets more distanced from her dad since she's dating Charlie, who seduces her by playing a piano duet and singing "Yankee Doodle" with an English accent.
Susan's father is terrified of losing her affection and calls Charlie to his office, pretending he isn't an alcoholic, overprotective or insecure guy: "If I were one of those dads, I'd probably say how my job is a distant second to my daughter."
Susan and Charlie share a revelatory encounter in the bathroom, sharing painful memories of their not so happy experiences: "The night he found out my mother was having an affair." In all these confessional visits to the bathroom, the interlocutor never sees Charlie's face, but in this scene you could feel much more than eye contact — although Susan was separated from him by a wall, they were seeing through it. Charlie's face cannot hide a profound, existential disappointment when Susan talks about her dysfunctional family: "I guess what I'm trying to say is it just... it kind of sucks having one parent ditch and then the other one lose their mind. I mean, how can I possibly hope to turn out even remotely functional?" Kat Dennings is really inspired and sober in this conversation.
Charlie expresses an individual, national, and universal crisis: "I get up every morning and I look in the mirror and I try and figure out just where I fit in. And I draw a complete blank. And you guys are looking to me to tell you what to do? You need to stop listening to me."
And Nathan really understands Charlie in a crucial moment when both have shared too much in few minutes (Downey Jr. is brightly jaded here).
DVD extras:
"With a fixed gaze like that of the dead one can stare for long hours at the smoke rising from a cigarette at the shape of a cup at a faded flower on the rug at a fading slogan on the wall.
One can be a healthy, beautiful female with a body like a leather tablecloth with two large and hard breasts, in bed with a drunk, a madman, a tramp one can stain the innocence of love.
One can degrade with guile all the deep mysteries one can keep on figuring out crossword puzzles happily discover the inane answers inane answers, yes—of five or six letters.
With shame one can hide the beauty of a moment’s togetherness at the bottom of a chest like an old, funny looking snapshot, in a day’s empty frame one can display the picture of an execution, a crucifixion, or a martyrdom. One can cover the crake in the wall with a mask one can cope with images more hollow than these.
at all one can give out a cry “Ah, so happy am I!”
"I just talked to Jon Favreau a bit ago, and he said that while there hasn't been an formal announcement on the sequel to "Iron Man," he's begun developing it. "We're working on it now," he said, "which hasn't been officially announced. It will be released in 2010."
Is the new Batman movie The Dark Knight cursed?
"Filming had barely wrapped earlier this year when Australian actor Heath Ledger (pictured) – who plays the sadistic, masochistic Joker – died of an accidental drug overdose. A member of the movie's crew died in a car accident during filming. 
The night of the London premiere in July, Batman actor Christian Bale was arrested after allegedly assaulting his mother. And Morgan Freeman ended up in hospital with a broken arm after a car crash in Mississippi".
