Categories: Archives

‘Wallflower’ takes screen with infinite relatability

A group of outcasts, a helpful English teacher and an overly enthusiastic “Rocky Horror…

MCT Campus

Logan Lerman and Emma Watson star as high school outcasts in “The Perks of Being a Wallflower.” (John Bramley/Summit Entertainment, LLC/MCT)

A group of outcasts, a helpful English teacher and an overly enthusiastic “Rocky Horror Picture Show” cast make up Stephen Chbosky’s “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” — a movie adaptation that shows “we are infinite.”

The simple, formulaic yet thoughtful screenplay of this novel-turned-film was written and directed by the book’s author himself, Chbosky. Its storyline might follow a group of misfits through a year of high school, but this is more than just another teen movie.

On the surface, “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” is a coming of age story. But beneath lies a myriad of adult, real-life problems told through the medium of adolescence.

It’s high school, and viewers are reminded of this with every football game, cafeteria fight and rebellious act of defiance throughout the film. But there exists an undertone of sincerity and urgency to the movie that indicates something real is wrong with each of these characters, and especially the story’s protagonist, Charlie (Logan Lerman).

Charlie is a quiet high school freshman trying to find a place where he feels he belongs. He finds solace in a group called the Wallflowers, who introduce him to drugs, alcohol, music and “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.”

The starring trio is rounded out by Patrick (Ezra Miller), who is eclectic, gay and compassionate, and his stepsister Sam (Emma Watson), who is upbeat but noticeably damaged.

While Charlie is intoxicated at a party, he lets slip to Sam that his best friend killed himself last May and also accidentally discovers Patrick’s relationship with the high school quarterback. The information only brings the friends closer together, and soon the three become inseparable.

The film takes place sometime in the late ’80s or early ’90s. No one has a cell phone, and everyone is listening to cassette tapes, which would be admittedly cooler on screen if recent trends weren’t emulating ’90s style so much.

The soundtrack is undeniably good. We hear David Bowie, The Smiths, New Order and other quintessential artists of those decades. Music weaves the movie’s scenes together as the characters constantly search for the perfect song for that mixtape or exactly what to listen to as they pretend to fly through the tunnel while standing in the back of a pickup truck.

While this movie isn’t doing anything innovative, it also isn’t contrived. It’s familiar, but it avoids feeling like another after-school special.

Pitt News Staff

Share
Published by
Pitt News Staff

Recent Posts

Op-Ed | An open letter to my signatory colleagues and to the silent ones

In an open letter to the Chancellor published on Apr. 25, a group of 49…

9 hours ago

Woman dead after large steel cylinder rolled away from Petersen Events Center construction site

A woman died after she was hit by a large cylindrical steel drum that rolled…

1 day ago

Pro-Palestinian protesters gather on Pitt’s campus, demand action from University

Hundreds of student protesters and community activists gathered in front of the Cathedral of Learning…

5 days ago

SGB releases statement in support of Pitt Gaza solidarity encampment

SGB released a statement on Sunday “regarding the Pitt Gaza solidarity encampment,” in which the…

6 days ago

Pitt faculty union reaches agreement with university administration 

Around 80 protestors from the Pitt faculty union and United Steelworkers gathered outside of the…

6 days ago

Column | A thank you to student journalists

Editor-in-chief Betul Tuncer reflects on the role of student journalists in society and says thank…

1 week ago