Brick

:

Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
72
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
Clever 'Brick' Is Fun but Doesn't Quite Add Up
Christy Lemire

By Christy Lemire, Associated Press

Our rating: 

You've got to give Rian Johnson credit.

He's taken a huge risk with his first feature, writing and directing a film that viewers will either embrace for its ingenuity or reject as a gimmicky stunt.

"Brick" is a 1930s-style film noir set in a contemporary Southern California high school (the one Johnson attended, actually, in sunny San Clemente), placing Dashiell Hammett-style patois in the mouths of angst-ridden teens.

"A body's got a right to be curious," rich-girl femme fatale Laura (Nora Zehetner) coos as she tries to manipulate bespectacled outsider Brendan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), who's roaming among the school's various cliques investigating the murder of his ex-girlfriend. (Later she'll ask him, "Why'd you take a powder the other night?" after he evades her obvious advances. Da noive of him.)

"Bulls" are cops and "gats" are guns, and Brendan is the unlikely "yeg" — or guy — who gets caught up in them. The action shifts between mundane suburban locations, such as tract houses and athletic fields, and determining who eats lunch where, and with whom, serves as a crucial clue.

Or as a brainy character — appropriately named "The Brain" — puts it: "Lunch is a lot of things. Lunch is difficult."

It's all very low budget and high concept, inspiring your head to want to like it more than your heart will allow. But something about this murder mystery is off-putting from the very beginning. The film's language is so self-consciously specific it often clangs, and the actions of its characters are so unrealistic, it keeps you at arm's length and never allows you to settle into a comfortable groove.

"Brick" begins with a body — that of pretty, blond Emily (Emilie de Ravin from "Lost"), lying face-down in the water outside an ominous-looking drainage tunnel. Brendan's the one who finds her that way, and having received a desperate call from her the previous day — on a pay phone, no less  — he becomes doubly suspicious and inspired to get to the bottom of the crime.

His search takes him to the popular kids, led by Laura; the drama geeks, led by the impossibly vampy Kara (Meagan Good in increasingly outlandish costumes and makeup); the stoners, led by the volatile Dode (Noah Segan); and finally to a shadowy figure known as The Pin, who runs a drug operation from his parents' wood-panelled basement. (Walking with a cane with a duck head on the handle, Lukas Haas plays him as a scrawny version of a Sydney Greenstreet villain.)

In the tradition of the classic Bogart characters, Brendan's looks in no way indicate what he's capable of doing as he digs closer to the dangerous truth. He's slight, fine-featured and messy-haired, perennially dressed in a simple, gray-hooded sweat shirt. But he can think on his feet, and he can take a punch (the frequency with which he gets his butt kicked is comical), all of which he's willing to do for this doomed woman he loved.

Gordon-Levitt has grown up confidently from his days playing a goofy kid on the wonderfully absurd, beautifully written sitcom "3rd Rock from the Sun," and having learned on that show how to handle rapid-fire dialogue serves him well here.

But again, it's hard to get a real grasp on his character or anyone else's because none of them feel even remotely like real people; they're more like one-note ideas that haven't been fleshed out for sake of an elaborate conceit that's trying desperately hard to be clever.

Johnson clearly had a good time with his first film, though: He's crafted a high school movie where no one goes to class, no one has homework, no one's awkward or insecure, and everyone has the most clever thing to say at just the right time.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

By Christy Lemire, Associated Press

Our rating: 

You've got to give Rian Johnson credit.

He's taken a huge risk with his first feature, writing and directing a film that viewers will either embrace for its ingenuity or reject as a gimmicky stunt.

"Brick" is a 1930s-style film noir set in a contemporary Southern California high school (the one Johnson attended, actually, in sunny San Clemente), placing Dashiell Hammett-style patois in the mouths of angst-ridden teens.

"A body's got a right to be curious," rich-girl femme fatale Laura (Nora Zehetner) coos as she tries to manipulate bespectacled outsider Brendan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), who's roaming among the school's various cliques investigating the murder of his ex-girlfriend. (Later she'll ask him, "Why'd you take a powder the other night?" after he evades her obvious advances. Da noive of him.)

"Bulls" are cops and "gats" are guns, and Brendan is the unlikely "yeg" — or guy — who gets caught up in them. The action shifts between mundane suburban locations, such as tract houses and athletic fields, and determining who eats lunch where, and with whom, serves as a crucial clue.

Or as a brainy character — appropriately named "The Brain" — puts it: "Lunch is a lot of things. Lunch is difficult."

It's all very low budget and high concept, inspiring your head to want to like it more than your heart will allow. But something about this murder mystery is off-putting from the very beginning. The film's language is so self-consciously specific it often clangs, and the actions of its characters are so unrealistic, it keeps you at arm's length and never allows you to settle into a comfortable groove.

"Brick" begins with a body — that of pretty, blond Emily (Emilie de Ravin from "Lost"), lying face-down in the water outside an ominous-looking drainage tunnel. Brendan's the one who finds her that way, and having received a desperate call from her the previous day — on a pay phone, no less  — he becomes doubly suspicious and inspired to get to the bottom of the crime.

His search takes him to the popular kids, led by Laura; the drama geeks, led by the impossibly vampy Kara (Meagan Good in increasingly outlandish costumes and makeup); the stoners, led by the volatile Dode (Noah Segan); and finally to a shadowy figure known as The Pin, who runs a drug operation from his parents' wood-panelled basement. (Walking with a cane with a duck head on the handle, Lukas Haas plays him as a scrawny version of a Sydney Greenstreet villain.)

In the tradition of the classic Bogart characters, Brendan's looks in no way indicate what he's capable of doing as he digs closer to the dangerous truth. He's slight, fine-featured and messy-haired, perennially dressed in a simple, gray-hooded sweat shirt. But he can think on his feet, and he can take a punch (the frequency with which he gets his butt kicked is comical), all of which he's willing to do for this doomed woman he loved.

Gordon-Levitt has grown up confidently from his days playing a goofy kid on the wonderfully absurd, beautifully written sitcom "3rd Rock from the Sun," and having learned on that show how to handle rapid-fire dialogue serves him well here.

But again, it's hard to get a real grasp on his character or anyone else's because none of them feel even remotely like real people; they're more like one-note ideas that haven't been fleshed out for sake of an elaborate conceit that's trying desperately hard to be clever.

Johnson clearly had a good time with his first film, though: He's crafted a high school movie where no one goes to class, no one has homework, no one's awkward or insecure, and everyone has the most clever thing to say at just the right time.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

88
Boston Globe: Ty Burr
Brick is Bogart goes to high school, in other words, but that thumbnail description doesn't begin to convey the lasting pleasures of Rian Johnson's directorial debut.Read Full Review »
83
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
Johnson also grabs hold of a fundamental truth and seduces us with it: The schoolyard can be the noirest burg of all.Read Full Review »
80
Salon.com: Andrew O'Hehir
Brick doesn't work 100 percent of the time, but it's a striking achievement, beautifully shot, often hilarious and occasionally moving.Read Full Review »
80
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Carina Chocano
Johnson has taken a well-worn, much-revised genre, adapted to what's become a clichéd setting and transcended both in the process.Read Full Review »
75
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
This movie leaves me looking forward to the director's next film; we can say of Rian Johnson, as somebody once said about a dame named Brigid O'Shaughnessy, "You're good. You're very good."Read Full Review »
75
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
"Sensational" is the word for Joseph Gordon-Levitt (equally striking in Mysterious Skin), who stars as Brendan, the teen outsider who becomes a budding Bogart.Read Full Review »
70
Slate: Troy Patterson
Like the best noirs, Brick is a triumph of attitude, and there's no arguing that its brand of deadpan cool is precisely unique.Read Full Review »
70
Village Voice: Michael Atkinson
The hair may thin considerably under Brick's hat after a while, and Hammett redone remains Hammett half done, but while the plates are in the air, it's a spectacle of nerve.Read Full Review »
70
Washington Post: Desson Thomson
Like a good campfire storyteller, writer-director Rian Johnson knows how to fuse the amusing and the edgy. And, in Brendan, he has created an endearing character.Read Full Review »
50
The New York Times: Stephen Holden
It's all so seamy, sordid, lurid and shocking! And dull, despite a noirish gloss of wide-angle cinematography and a jaundiced, smoggy color scheme.Read Full Review »
See all Brick reviews at metacritic.com »