(Rated R for language, including sexual references, and for teen drug and alcohol use; directed by Richard Linklater; stars Ellar Coltrane, Patricia Arquette, Ethan Hawke and Lorelei Linklater; run time: 165 minutes.)
Unique, memorable coming-of-age film rings true
By Ted Giese
Richard Linklater, in his film “Boyhood,” asks the question, “What if you aren’t seizing the moment in life — what if the moment is seizing you?”
“Boyhood” is a unique film shot over 12 years that tells the story of a young boy, Mason (Ellar Coltrane), and his family as he grows from boyhood through adolescence into early adulthood.
At times gritty and painfully honest, “Boyhood” paints a picture of a family travelling through life, always caught up in the moment and struggling to make the best of those moments. The moments are charged with drama, awkwardness, feelings of belonging and alienation, love and suffering.
The beauty of the film is not just seeing the character of Mason age but also watching all the other characters age, and to a certain extent watching North American culture age. The whole process of making the film, which is essentially a series of chronological short films, sparkles on screen because it is so patient and deliberate. There are no flashbacks or flash-forwards, no special makeup to make anyone look older or younger, no changing of actors because a 6-year-old can’t play an 18-year-old. Time simply unfolds in a natural way, and “time” itself becomes a character in the film, and as such has a different relationship with each character.
In the 1960s a documentary film movement dubbed Direct Cinema emerged. This style of filmmaking, related in many ways to Cinéma vérité (“truth cinema”), was concerned with capturing reality and endeavoring to portray it truthfully. In “Boyhood,” Director Linklater employs an adaptation of this style to great effect. He is concerned with truth and natural dialogue and, while “Boyhood” is scripted, it often feels like a documentary.
The result is a film that provokes introspection. Viewers will see moments that ring true to their own lives, or they will be confronted with very real-looking moments alien to their experience. Either way, “Boyhood” lingers in the mind, demanding reflection, after the closing credits have rolled.
When watching “Boyhood,” Christian viewers might want to consider the way Scripture deals with this kind of reflection on life. Alluding to Isaiah 40:6-8, St. Peter writes: “All flesh is like grass and all its glory like the flower of grass. The grass withers, and the flower falls ….”
In “Boyhood,” Mason is shown growing like grass, gaining earthly “glory,” while on a parallel track the adults around him — his parents, in particular — are withering grass whose flower is falling. Profound dramatic tension underpins the film when viewed through the lens of Scripture in this way. Time is depicted as unstoppable, and the question, “What if you aren’t seizing the moment in life — what if the moment is seizing you?” comes into sharp focus.
The “falling flower” of life touches Mason as he grows like the grass. Two short, quiet moments illustrate this early in the film. One comes in a scene where the family is preparing to move, and Mason has the job of painting over any marks inside the house. The camera focuses in on him painting the doorjamb where his mother marked her children’s growth. The other comes when Mason, as a young boy, sits alone and carefully looks at the decomposing carcass of a small bird. Nostalgia runs up against the pragmatic, death runs up against life, and the mediator is the character of time.
This would be a profoundly sad film for viewers who have no hope in the face of death. For many people, time is a tyrant, but for Christians St. Peter concludes his allusion to Isaiah by proclaiming that “the word of the Lord remains forever.” Time passes, death comes, but God and His Word endure; the Christian’s hope is found in the fact that he or she is wrapped up in Christ Jesus, who transcends time and conquers death.
Does the enduring “word of the Lord” make an appearance in “Boyhood”?
On Mason’s 15th birthday, his father takes him out to the country to meet his stepmother’s parents. His new step-grandparents give him birthday gifts: a personalized red-letter edition Bible and a vintage heirloom shotgun. His father and stepmother give him a suit. All of these gifts are presented as items he’ll need for his future.
There is another scene in this part of the film where Mason and his sister visit their step-grandparents’ church. This sparks a discussion about Baptism. In depicting this, Linklater is relatively kind to the Christian faith by avoiding overt editorializing. Instead, his film presents in a plain way a brief moment where a young man who hasn’t grown up in the church is thrust into a world with which he’s unfamiliar. Christian viewers may want to tuck these scenes away in their minds for future reflection as they interact with visitors to their congregation, remembering that they, like Mason, are caught up in the story of their own life with all its ups and downs, questions and concerns.
With the summer blockbuster season now officially over, “Boyhood” provides an opportunity to watch something truly memorable — an authentic coming-of-age film that rings true and yearns for something enduring to transcend the fading, withering, falling moments of life.
The Rev. Ted Giese is associate pastor of Mount Olive Lutheran Church, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada; a contributor to The Canadian Lutheran and Reporter; and movie reviewer for the “Issues, Etc.” radio program.
Posted Sept. 19, 2014 / Updated Sept. 20, 2014