Review by Dustin Putman
2 stars out of 4
"St. Elmo's Fire" has often been compared to as a cross between, "The
Breakfast Club," and, "The Big Chill," but there is one noticably large
difference. While those two films were about relatively mature,
intelligent people, "St. Elmo's Fire," features seven characters that
are, for the most part, obnoxious and bratty. I guess that's why the
cast of this movie was routinely labeled, "The Brat Pack."
As already noted, "St. Elmo's Fire," follows seven close friends in
Georgetown, following graduation from college. Alec (Judd Nelson), who
has become an assistant of a senator, desperately wants to marry his
live-in girlfriend, Leslie (All Sheedy), even though he can't help but
constantly cheat on her. Kevin (Andrew McCarthy), a cynical,
chain-smoking writer, is totally against love, and secretly holds a
secret affection for a certain someone. Wendy (Mare Winningham), the
virgin of the group, still lives with her overbearing parents, and
against the wishes of her parents, loves Billy (Rob Lowe), a rebellious
guy who is already married and has a child. Jules (Demi Moore) is the
wild one, a secretary who says she is sleeping with her boss, and starts
to have a cocaine problem. And Kirby (Emilio Estevez) holds an almost
obsessive love for a slightly older pre-med student (Andie McDowell).
"St. Elmo's Fire," is one of those coming-of-age movies, where the
characters are simply trying to come to terms with growing up, but it is
far from being one of the better films in that genre. The main problem
with the film is that the screenplay, by Joel Schumacher and Carl
Kurlander, is very dumbed-down. Aside from maybe Mare Winningham and
Emilio Estevez, the other five main characters are so annoying and
self-involved that serious things occur in certain scenes, and yet the
characters still remain only concerned with themselves. Sure, some
people are like that in real life, but this film paints all young adults
as basically immature little children.
Far more successful are some of the supporting characters, who are so
much more smartly written that I longed for the film to have the
secondary people switch places with the main characters. By far, the
most successful subplot involves Estevez's deep love for Andie
MacDowell, who gives the film's best, most natural performance. Their
penultimate sequence together, set at a snowy cabin, is so full of
magic, excitement, and spontaneity that it just goes to show how
misguided the rest of the film really is. Also interesting in a
supporting role is Anna Maria Horsford, as a prostitute who meets
McCarthy. The film could have really made something of those few scenes
involving them together, but it fails to do anything with it.
Other subplots are either ill-advised, anti-climactic, or both. For
example, the whole story involving the love triangle between Nelson,
Sheedy, and McCarthy is beyond juvenile. And the film sets up Moore's
drug problem, but it is never dealt with, and nothing is ever really
solved or discussed.
"St. Elmo's Fire," is one of those films that feature a great deal of
capable actors trapped within the confines of a stupid screenplay.
Something could have certainly been done with this material, but again,
the characters and situations are written at what seems to be a
grade-school level, and therefore, everything collapses under its own
weight.
Copyright © 1998 Dustin Putman
|