NAPOLEON DYNAMITE
2004 - USA

Director: Jared Hess
Starring: Jon Heder, Jon Gries, Aaron Ruell, Efren Ramirez, Tina Majorino, Diedrich Bader


- Reviewed by Rachel

Napoleon Dynamite I don’t mind at all that this “indie” film is startlingly well-promoted and sports a fancy animated web site. I have no shame—I don’t care if Spielberg directed it. It’s so flippin’ funny I can hardly stand it. But I should preface all this by confessing that part of my giddy delight comes from the fact that our hero, Napoleon Dynamite, strongly resembles my socially inept younger brother.

Like Napoleon, my brother has perfected the Inaudible Mumble, the Inappropriately Angry Response To An Innocent Question, and the Outrageous Request For Others To Drop Whatever They Are Doing And Drive Across Town For Some Completely Ridiculous Reason. These things, plus the uncanny physical resemblance, had my husband and I rolling in the aisles.

And like my brother, Napoleon suffers from delusions of martial arts grandeur and his idea of a compliment goes something like: “I see you're drinking 1% milk. Is that because you think you're fat? Because you're not. You could probably be drinking whole milk.” Needless to say, it’s Napoleon’s lack of social skills (not numchuck skills, as he believes) that holds him back in the challenging world of high school politics. He hates everyone and everything. His perpetual exasperation and totally unacceptable response to the people and llamas around him is simply hysterical.

But on to the actual story.... Our unfortunately named hero lives in present-day rural Idaho. Were it not for the mention of internet chat rooms, you might easily assume that the film takes place in 1983. But no. The costume and music choices sadly show just how behind-the-times small towns can be. The plotline is fairly subtle. Napoleon lives with his geeky brother, Kip, and endures the temporary presence of his smarmy uncle, Rico, while riding bikes with his apparently brain-damaged best friend, Pedro. The genius of this movie is all in the characters, every one of which is flawlessly conceived and performed.

Tracking Napoleon through a few weeks of high school hell, a kind of alternative Revenge of the Nerds story emerges. Napoleon strikes up an awkward romance with a strange girl who tries to sell him an amateur Glamour Shots photo session and together they set out to get Pedro elected as class president.

I can’t say too much more without revealing the jokes that you will so relish discovering throughout this absurd story. I’ll leave you with the enticing thought of two horrendous hair pieces and not one, but two sign-language dance sequences to enjoy. And in what may be an homage to the 80’s culture in which he is trapped, Napoleon also uses the power of dance to overcome his fear and change the course of his high school career. You won’t forget it.

Whether or not you have a little Napoleon in your life, you’d have to be brain-dead not to appreciate the humor of the universal asshole found in all teenagers. It’s the nerdy jerk in all of us that Jon Heder portrays so well as Napoleon Dynamite. You won’t get an explanation of his bizarre moniker. And there’s no mention of where his parents might be or why he is... well, the way he is. It’s just a-day-in-the-life kind of story, which you will probably find utterly side-splitting.

Roger Ebert thinks the folks at Sundance only laughed at this movie to avoid appearing uncool. Yeah. Right. Show your age much, Ebert? If you don’t find teenage social bungling amusing and you don’t find humor inherent in the Future Farmers of America organization, then maybe you won’t like this film. I can’t imagine it, but I guess it’s possible. I think the characters in this film are genuinely, unavoidably, and brilliantly funny. It takes a special kind of sourpuss not to laugh at them. Anyway, for you film know-it-alls... here’s the obligatory mention of the filmmaker’s influences: Wes Anderson and Todd Solondz. There you go. Done. Vote for Pedro!

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