Review: 'Coasting'
Review by
Richard Propes
The Independent Critic
September 28, 2009
TheIndependentCritic.com
Love.
It changes everything, doesn't it?
We get in relationships, we go through the
motions, we carry out our responsibilities and fulfill our
duties both real and imagined.
Sometimes, love is pushed aside.
We coast.
In "Coasting," Wesley (Jonathan C.
Legat, "White Out") meets Lauren (Stephanie Wyatt,
"Off-Loop") in a hotel bar one late night in the small
town of Stillwater, Illinois.
It is a chance meeting, not far removed from
that of Bill Nighy and Kelly MacDonald in the magnificent
"The Girl in the Cafe." The meeting is, at first
glance, a largely innocent meeting filled with pleasant
conversation, genuine laughs, heartfelt attention and, oh yeah,
connection. Genuine human connection.
Wesley and Lauren return to their
normal lives, yet their normal lives no longer feel normal...if
they ever did.
Wesley is unsatisfied in a dead-end job he
abhors, while Lauren's career as a photographer isn't going
where she'd like it to go. Both Wesley and Lauren are married
to, on the surface, seemingly idyllic partners who are stable,
at least modestly attentive, functional and, yet, they are
largely going through the disconnected motions of merely
functioning in relationships that should be vibrant, passionate,
energized and alive.
As time goes on, the memory of that
connection lingers and, perhaps serendipitously, the two connect
once again in, yes, that same Stillwater hotel bar.
This time, the passion will not be denied
and the two succumb to their emotional and physical desires.
After this encounter, both Wesley and Lauren face, with
heartbreaking yet resonant authenticity, the remaining shards of
their lives while defending these feelings for one another.
With "Coasting," director Michael
P. Noens and co-writer David B. Grelck have that mixes the
awkward discomfort of Zach Braff's indie gem "Garden
State" with the tenderness and quiet intimacy of the
aforementioned "The Girl in the Cafe." The resulting
film is a film that simultaneously funny and endearing,
heartbreaking and yet genuinely hopeful in the truest of ways
that hope can be birthed out of our life experiences.
I remember after viewing Jonathan C. Legat's
last film, the Grelck directed "White Out," this
feeling of "If only Legat had really let go and offered a
bit more vulnerability, this film would have truly soared."
In "Coasting," Legat truly soars and takes the film
right along with him giving a performance that is equal parts
vulnerable, funny, raw and honest.
Fortunately, for audiences and Legat,
co-star Stephanie Wyatt serves up an equally vulnerable, funny,
raw and honest performance as the young woman whose true self
has become stifled personally and professionally. Wyatt's Lauren
is simultaneously a mature woman and innocent child, a young
woman who seemingly longs for the intangible in her very
tangible world.
"Coasting" is a deceptive film,
much like Braff's "Garden State," in that the film
occasionally feels off-kilter, uncomfortable and even distant.
Yet, as the relationship between Wesley and Lauren develops it
becomes clear how beautifully this works as it becomes
painfully obvious how uncomfortable Wesley and Lauren truly are
within their own lives and themselves. This
"discomfort" begins to dissipate as they discover
connection, an emotional truth to which most of us who've
experienced unhealthy relationships seguing into healthy
relationships would testify.
It becomes easy to understand, minus the
usual Hollywood-style dramatics and histrionics, just why these
two individuals feel so connected to one another and
disconnected from everyone and everything else.
This patient development, a bold move
cinematically, gives the film's closing scenes an emotional
depth that drives the film home, though there are times when the
move falls short as in Wesley's scenes in his office. The office
scenes, which could and should reinforce the dissatisfaction in
Wesley's life too often appear more like cartoonish deleted
scenes from "Office Space."
Tech credits are solid across the board,
with kudos especially going to Danny Crook's stellar camera work
and truly killer original music from Geoff Shell.
There are moments in "Coasting"
that feel very, very real.
Have you ever longed for something or
someone?
Have you ever wondered "Why am I not
happy?"
Have you ever, much to your own surprise,
discovered a very real connection in the most unexpected of
places?
We all have, I believe. The longing for and
celebration of inward and outward connection are an inherent
human experience with all its joys and sorrows.
With "Coasting," director Michael
P. Noens and co-writer David B. Grelck along with their
entire cast have captured those pristine moments of humanity in
all their awkward and awesome vulnerability and brought
them simply and beautifully to life.
"Coasting" is just starting its
film festival run. For more information on "Coasting,"
visit the film's website.
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