from
Creative Loafing.com
Approaching
adulthood
Zeiger's
documentary 'Senior Year' puts the real in reality TV
BY FELICIA FEASTER
The
mesmerizing PBS series "Senior Year" combines the intoxicating,
practically hard-wired thrill of reality TV with the insight of
art. Unlucky enough to be included in the same format that bequeathed
us "Survivor" and "The Real World," "Senior Year's" brand of humanism
reveals such programs as the detergent-and-jeans- selling human
depravity freak shows they are.
"Senior
Year" is produced and directed by former Atlantan David Zeiger
(Displaced in the New South), who moved to Los Angeles where he
teaches at the USC Film School and is working on a screenplay.
Zeiger enjoyed a notable filmmaking career in Atlanta and was
named the city's "Best Filmmaker in Atlanta" in 1997 by Creative
Loafing. Zeiger's documentary about his son Danny's Decatur high
school band The Band, which aired on PBS's award-winning P.O.V.
series in 1998, inspired his interest in the trials and tribulations
of the teen years that has continued with "Senior Year."
Working
with a team of six young filmmakers on "Senior Year," Zeiger chronicles
the lives of 15 students infected with that suddenly familiar-again,
maddening itch to make it through the prolonged, grueling purgatory
of senior year.
Broken
into 13 30-minute episodes, "Senior Year" debuts with a one-hour
premiere (Channel 8, GPTV-PBS, Jan. 11, 10 p.m.) that gets its
hooks in immediately, leaving viewers like a marlin wiggling on
a lure in anticipation of next week's installment. The brilliance
of Zeiger's series lies largely in its judicious choice of subjects.
Instead of the narcissistic, pampered mall rats and suburban dullards
of "The Real World," "Senior Year" features a fantastically diverse
group with real, meaty stories to tell.
The
cast includes kids like Kendra, a girl left disabled in a car
accident, and Maria and Jean, a spunky, opinionated couple --
one of those career couples familiar from high school who operate
throughout the film as a joined-at-the-hip unit. There's the sorta
flaky, artistic Jen, who offers one of the film's many nuggets
of philosophical insight when she says, in describing her own
mother's enormous, positive influence, "parents rub off on their
kids." Busting the mold of black football players trying to "make
it to the pros" is Derard. A sweet, sensitive kid who may be as
academically gifted as he is brilliant on the gridiron, Derard
is tellingly most often talked about in terms of his sports potential,
reflecting a culture that tends to reward athlete prowess, not
intelligence, in young black men.
There's
not a clunker among them. Their problems range from the minor
-- Jen's efforts to find a boyfriend -- to the nightmarish, like
Jean's father's attempted suicide. The usual parents-versus-children
complaints arise, like the exasperated Filipino parents fretting
over their gay son Jet's party boy irresponsibility. But in many
cases, a new dynamic emerges. The kids are often the ones forced
to hold their parents' hands through their emotional crises or
forced to deal with issues related to parental abandonment.
"Senior
Year's" premise can initially seem very 21st-century PC with its
rainbow coalition of eclectic, multi-hued teens and their Whitman's
Sampler of "issues." In some ways the school itself, Fairfax High
in Los Angeles, seems more exceptional than typical, too -- a
public school with an ethnically diverse but harmonious student
body run by maverick educator/philosopher Dean Bogue. But the
kids themselves are so eccentric and endearing and the prolonged
series format so ripe for fresh discoveries, such touchy-feely
trappings and MTV-style editing begin to matter less and less.
Though its foot is firmly planted in the ratings-boosting aesthetics
of MTV, the spirit of "Senior Year" is more in keeping with Frederick
Wiseman's pioneering anthropological documentaries like High School
or the Maysles brothers' Salesman.
The
reiterated theme, of course, is senior year and the on-the-cusp
tension of kids contemplating this entry into a real Real World.
The kids themselves are enthralling works-in-progress -- still
children enough they have to be reminded in a morning P.A. message
to look both ways before they cross the road (tragically, two
are hit, and one killed by reckless drivers) and adult enough
to grapple with pregnancy, neighborhood violence, suicide, the
painful emotional aftermath of abortion and a classmate's death.
Self-assured and in control one minute, the next a crumbled heap
of doubt and despair, the teenage heart and mind are captured
with great empathy and sensitivity.
But
"Senior Year" is at its most exciting and poetic when it stretches
beyond the parameters of its teen focus. It is in sketching the
complexities of Kendra's unique perspective as a handicapped teen
whose brain is razor sharp but whose body shows evidence of a
car accident that the documentary achieves greatness.
A
critical, tough, painfully insightful teen, Kendra bristles at
being grouped alongside the retarded kids on the special ed bus,
and in a telling moment, she recoils at her treatment by a "helpful"
school photographer. The senior yearbook photographer -- an unctuous
older hippie type -- continually touches Kendra's hands or shoulder,
her disability giving him some sense of license in pawing her
and offers of help where none is needed. In this one brief exchange
we understand volumes about how the disabled feel condescended
to, marginalized and inferior while these perpetrators feel only
"sensitive" and "helpful."
In
a culture that has learned to see teenagers as the enemy, "Senior
Year" reminds us that they are more accurately a window into the
culture's best and worst future. Dr. Bogue tells the filmmakers
of her young charges, "Their behavior is a language -- it tells
what they are unable to tell." In a society more comfortable with
lamenting its hormonal disasters, "Senior Year" offers the atypical
message that there is hope for the next generation.
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