| Will
Oldham, Daniel London, Tanya Smith .
Old Joy is writer/director Kelly Reichardt's
long-awaited follow-up to her revered but underseen 1994 feature
debut, River of Grass. (She directed a couple of shorts in the interim,
including Ode, a Super-8 film inspired by the song "Ode to
Bill.") Daniel London and cult folksinger Will Oldham star
in the film as two old friends who go on a camping trip to a hot
springs in the Cascade mountain range of Oregon. London's Mark is
the responsible one with the modest house, the wife (who resents
his gallivanting off), the dog (who comes along), and the baby on
the way. He listens to Air America, and makes all the right liberal
noises. Oldham's Kurt is the free-spirit type with the untamed facial
hair and the junker car that looks more lived-in than vehicular.
Kurt suggests the trip, and they take Mark's car. Kurt has the directions
to the place, and they get lost ("I think we're somewhere...in
the area") and spend the night at a garbage-strewn campsite,
where they discuss their lives, and Kurt laments the apparent dissolution
of their friendship. In the morning, they have breakfast in a diner,
and Mark apologizes to Tanya (Tanya Smith) over the phone, explaining
that he'll be home later than expected. In the daylight, they find
the hot springs, and spend the afternoon quietly unwinding. Reichardt
co-wrote Old Joy with Jonathan Raymond, adapting his short story,
which was originally written as a collaboration with photographer
Justine Kurland. It was shot (on Super-16) by Peter Sillen and features
a soundtrack by Yo La Tengo. The film was selected by the Film Society
of Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art for inclusion in
the 2006 edition of New Directors/New Films. |