I am writing this review at Sundance, where I have met a lot of kids trying to pitch their sort of films and get production deals, and having a good film is not enough: You also need the relentless chutzpah of a Max Fischer.īill Murray has a way of turning up in perfect smaller roles he stars in his own films, but since "Tootsie,'' he has made supporting roles into a sort of parallel career. Brooks ("As Good As It Gets''), who liked it enough to help them get financing for a feature from Columbia Pictures. "Kit'' Carson, got his encouragement, took it to the Sundance Film Festival and cornered director James L. They were friends at the University of Texas who made a short film, pitched it to screenwriter L.M. The legend of that film is well known, and suggests that Anderson and Wilson may have a little of Max Fischer in their own personalities-the film may have elements of self-portraiture. It's their second film, after the slight but engaging "Bottle Rocket'' (1996). "Rushmore'' was directed by Wes Anderson and written by Anderson and his college friend Owen Wilson. When plotting replaces stage-setting and character development, the air goes out of the movie. (Still, he winds up hiding from life at the bottom of a swimming pool, just like Benjamin in "The Graduate.'') The movie turns into a strategic duel between Max and Blume, and that could be funny, too, except that it gets a little mean when Max spills the beans to Blume's wife, and feels too contrived. He is, essentially, a kid himself-immature, vindictive, lovestruck, self-centered, physically awkward, but with years more experience in getting his way. ("Max, has it ever occurred to you that you're far too young for me?'') Blume is played by Murray with the right note to counter Max's strategies. It's ingenious the way he uses his political and organizing abilities to get his way with people, how he enlists a younger student ( Mason Gamble) as his gofer, how he reasons patiently with the headmaster and thinks he can talk Miss Cross into being his girlfriend. Max Fischer emerges as not just a brainy comic character, but as a kid who could do anything, if he weren't always trying to do everything. Up until this point, even a little further, "Rushmore'' has a kind of effortless grace. Soon he, too, is in love with Miss Cross. Murray has kids in Rushmore, but hates them. Among the potential donors is a steel tycoon named Blume ( Bill Murray). She is, he finds, incredibly beautiful, and he falls instantly in love, devising a scheme to attract her attention by running a campaign for a school aquarium. The book was recently checked out, he discovers, by Miss Cross ( Olivia Williams), a first-grade teacher at Rushmore. Reading a book in the school library, he finds a quote by Jacques Cousteau written in the margin. Then Max encounters a problem even he cannot outflank. Always dressed in a tie and snappy blazer (unless in costume for one of his activities), he speaks with an unnerving maturity and is barely able to conceal his feelings of superiority for the headmaster ( Brian Cox) and other adults, who enforce their stuffy rules because they are not, and never were, able to work without a net the way Max can. He's in the exclusive Rushmore Academy on a scholarship his dad is a barber. With his bushy eyebrows and black horn-rims, he looks a little like a young Benjamin Braddock from "The Graduate.'' Max, played by Jason Schwartzman, has a secret. His grades are so bad, he's on "sudden death probation,'' but in his spare time, he edits the school magazine and runs the fencing club, the beekeeping club, the karate team, the French club and the Max Fischer Players. Although he's a lousy student, that doesn't stop him from organizing a movement to keep Latin on the curriculum of his exclusive prep school. Max Fischer, the hero of "Rushmore,'' is an activity jock, one of those kids too bright and restless to color inside the lines.
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