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Get the Reviews: A Speedy and Fun Ride Awaits In 'Scott Pilgrim vs. the World'

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CHRISTIANITY TODAY reviewed by Josh Hurst

Let's start with this: Technically, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World is not an indie movie. I mean, not really. When I think of a truly independent film, I think of a motley crew of actors and filmmakers armed with their own cameras, a budget of virtually nothing, and a strong DIY aesthetic. And by those standards, Scott Pilgrimjust doesn't fit the bill. It's a big-budget movie, relatively speaking, with visual effects that qualify as truly cutting-edge. In Michael Cera and Jason Schwartzman, it has at least two familiar actors. It has the backing of a studio. It's no Avatar, but it's no home movie, either.
I say all this because the film will likely be classified as an "indie comedy," but let's be more precise: Scott Pilgrim is more like an action-packed comedy that celebrates--and at times sends up--a particularly indie culture. It's fueled by punk rock and a love of classic Nintendo; its visual vocabulary is part manga, part Mario Brothers. Its quirky, sweetly awkward central love story feels cut from the same cloth as Juno, while its genre-bending sci-fi slant feels akin to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Its action scenes are spectacular, and it's the funniest picture I've seen all year.

So, what is it, exactly? It's hard to put into just a few words, except to say that it's an unmitigated joy and an absolute blast. So let's start with its origins. Scott Pilgrim vs. the World is based on a graphic novel by Bryan Lee O'Malley; his work fused a love of anime and manga with a particularly indie aesthetic and a sense of humor that managed to be sweet and irreverent at the same time.

The movie could be described in much the same way: In fact, director Edgar Wright--a cult favorite for films such as Hot Fuzz and Shaun of the Dead--has made what might be one of the most lovingly accurate graphic novel adaptations of all time, a movie that is clearly enamored and respectful to both the particulars and the spirit of its source material. It's a movie that's utterly enthralled with its own comic book origins, in a way that no movie this side of American Splendor has been--and it shows in every frame, as Wright brings bright colors and goofy humor to a production that splices animation and video game graphics into every single live-action frame.

And in that sense, I'd almost call it this year's Speed Racer. I'm in the minority of those who happen to thinkSpeed Racer was an unmitigated masterpiece of sheer creativity and joy--a movie where the style is the substance, a movie that's just about being a movie, a movie that never asks to be taken for anything but face value. Scott Pilgrim is in the same boat. Some might see it as some great hipster parable, a postmodern epic for the Nintendo generation; personally, I think it's simply a triumph of dizzying cinematic style for its own sake, and as such, it never misses a beat or hits a false note.

And yet, there's more to it than the pretty pictures and the geeky humor. This is a movie with heart. So what's it about? Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera, playing a punk rock/action hero version of his Juno character) plays bass for an up-and-coming garage band. He has a gay roommate (Kieran Culkin, delightfully deadpan). He's dating a high school girl named Knives (Ellen Wong, wonderfully enthusiastic and sweet). He falls for another girl, a mysterious stranger who literally skates through his dreams (Ramona, played by Mary Elizabeth Winstead, channeling the Kate Winslet of Eternal Sunshine right down to the striking blue hair). So, it's out with Knives, in with Ramona--except, in order to date her, Scott finds that, for reasons never made entirely clear (but who cares?), he must defeat each of her seven evil ex-boyfriends in battle. The seventh ex happens to be Gideon (Jason Schwartzman in his juiciest role yet), a record label guru whose Battle of the Bands contest Scott's trio is trying to conquer.

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SOURCE: Urban Christian News

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