Flash Movie Review: Salinger
After so many years the details have lost their crispness; I can only recall the feelings. High school was such a strange place for me. Spending 8 years with the same classmates in elementary school was my safe haven. Sure there were disagreements and several cliques, but they were minor aberrations in the scheme of things. Being thrown in with students from 4 other elementary schools was overwhelming. Add a schedule of different subjects and classrooms into the mix, I thought I would not be able to navigate the sea of strangers flowing through the hallways of the high school. It turned out the compass that would guide me that first year was my English literature class. Catcher in the Rye was one of the novels that was on our list of required reading. It was in that classroom where all of us freshmen found commonality through Holden Caulfield. I can remember the way he talked and acted was different then anyone else I had read about in elementary school. Here was a character that my classmates and I could rally around; I finally found myself being part of a group. All of us wanted to know who was this author J.D. Salinger but by then there was a mystery building up around the solitary writer. This documentary tried to unravel the secrecy around the reclusive wordsmith. Starting out having the photographer talk about how he shot one of the last photographs of Salinger was a great way to draw in the viewer. I enjoyed the scenes of the New England town where Salinger lived and especially the interviews with the local residents. If the story would have stayed with the local townspeople I think it would have made a more entertaining movie. Having celebrities such as Philip Seymour Hoffman (The Master, The Ides of March) and Edward Norton (Fight Club, The Illusionist) talk about Salinger was peculiar to me. However, I found it more interesting when they had some of his contemporaries like Gore Vidal (Myra Breckinrdige, Is Paris Burning) and Tom Wolfe (The Bonfire of the Vanities, The Right Stuff). Due to the little information available on Salinger there was not much this movie could offer. There were long passages where I was bored. With reenactments and the repeated use of the same photos, all I could think of was how Salinger and Holden would have hated this film.
1 3/4 stars
Posted on October 3, 2013, in Documentary and tagged 1 3/4 stars, catcher in the rye, documentary, Holden Caulfield, j d salinger, new england. Bookmark the permalink. 13 Comments.
I went to a preppy grade school and he came to our class. I also met Lillian Hellman… I real high brow school in San Francisco.
I am blown away; how incredible you got to meet such high caliber authors. What was it like to listen to him speak?
My friend, in 6th grade all I cared about was what time recess started. Things wasted on youth.
You certainly are right. I loved recess and the ice cream truck after school.
Ps Lillian Hellman was a little grandma when my grade school friend invited me to her ranch. Only later I knew who she was….
You’re right…Salinger/Holdern would hate this movie and the book, also by Salerno/Shields. I started the book, too detailed and repetitive. I’d rather just have my memories of Holden, The Glasses and the few other books. Perhaps I’ll read the newly published material when it comes out. Thanks for the review. I’ll see the doc when it comes to PBS or Cable.
Thank you for your comments. I think it would be wise to wait for DVD and hope for the best with the new works that will be coming out.
It was neat reading it in high school bc I grew up in NYC – went to school in the Big Apple – and hung out at Wollman Rink and Central Park.
Appreciated you leaving your comments; it must have been extra cool reading the book for you. Thanks for stopping by.
=) Keep up the neat write-ups.
Thank you for your sweet words, I really appreciate it.
I SO much appreciate this review as I have been aching to go see this. I’m not sure when it’s on here in Australia but as soon as I see it is on, I want to see it. I agree, what can they know of Salinger?? It disturbs me you had long periods of being bored – this is dismal! For such an interesting person as Salinger, this is really dismal.
Love how you intro’d. Fancy being thrown in with kids from 4 other schools? ! That’s really crushing it. I agree it would have been overwhelming.
Really appreciate this – might wait until it hits DVD. Thank you 🙂
It is my pleasure and I am so happy you appreciated this review. I agree, how can we really know Salinger? BTW the movie did not stay long here so there is a good chance the film will be released in DVD soon. Thank you for leaving your comments.