Documentarian Robert Greene chaperones 18-year-old Kati Genthner through the three days before her graduation (with honors) from Pleasant Valley High School near Jacksonville, Alabama. She is preparing to leave for the comparatively cosmopolitan Charlotte, North Carolina, where her out-of-work parents have preceded her. In their absence, she has clung to boyfriend-turned-fiancé James, who shows a pulse but is otherwise an unambitious live-at-homer. Greene, who is Katis elder half-brother, meshes with the surroundings enough to play fly-on-the-wall, establishing his outsider-aesthete status by rendering her existence in ethereal atmospherics and soundtrack post-rock. (The subjects native music suffices: tuneless marching bands, muttered chorales, cheeseball soaring radio rock.) Without belaboring any point or entrapping his subjects, Greenewhose film is repetitive even while detailing such a brief period of timesuggests Jacksonvilles social options as recombinations of TV room, mall, backyard pool, church, and public school. (The other time-passer is s-e-x.) Throughout, perspectives on the films present are offered via the past (footage of a lively eight-year-old Kati) and the future (Katis narration, sober with pee-test revelations, recorded two months after filming). Greene may intend Katis story as a quiet tragedy, but the native feeling of thats-just-the-way-it-is lethargy (Only in Alabama can you be a home-school drop-out) is... More >>>
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