HILL BEHIND THE CAMERA
Confident debut with Mid90s
Jonah Hill has always wanted to direct. He worships filmmakers and has treated what he describes as an “accidental” but “wonderful” 15-year acting career as a partial film school, learning from people such as Bennett Miller, who directed him in Moneyball, and Martin Scorsese on
The Wolf of Wall Street. But Hill didn’t just want to make any film — he wanted to have something to say, and the confidence and “emotional maturity” required to lead people.
He settled on a coming-of-age story, which he laughs is a “tried and true” formula for a first film. It’s about a 13-year-old boy, Stevie (Sunny Suljic), growing up in Los Angeles with a single mother (Katherine Waterston) and an abusive older brother (Lucas Hedges), who finds solace (and quite a bit of trouble) with bunch of local skateboarders (newcomers Na-kel Smith, Olan Prenatt, Ryder McLaughlin and Gio Galicia).
It took Hill three years to write Mid90s. For the shoot, he and his crew painstakingly recreated the mid-1990s Los Angeles he remembers, from the music, to the clothes, the talk and even the trash.
“A Doritos bag has a wildly different shape and esthetic now than it did in 1995,” Hill says.
Hill spoke about the film and what he was trying to say. His remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.
Q What was the genesis of this idea?
A Well, I grew up skateboarding in the mid-’90s in Los Angeles. It is in no way a biopic or an autobiography, but I knew skateboarding would play in some way into my first film because although I was terrible at it, it was something that came into my life when I really needed it and really gave me a lens that I saw most things through, even
when I went into comedy or film; it’s subversive, it’s anti, it’s punk, its sense of humour, taste in music, attitude toward authority (laughs). And to me skateboarding is always butchered in film. It’s always done stereotypically, made by people who weren’t from the culture a lot of the time.
Q How did you settle on Sunny for the lead?
A He had the exact quality I was looking for, which was someone who was very young for their age but who was 10 feet tall inside. He was the first kid we read and after he did this scene (of yelling at his mom in the car), everyone was like, ‘Oh this isn’t just a good child actor, this is a great actor of any age or gender.’ He was 11 when we shot. I’m 34 and have been acting for 15 years and have never had to strap a movie on my back and walk across the field with it and he did it at 11. He’s a freak of nature. He’s remarkable.
Q I feel like I certainly learned something about how teenage boys are together from this film.
A These kids speak in a way I don’t agree with, they treat women in a way I don’t agree with. But they also are very much there for one another. There’s good and bad to people. It’s not black and white. And things like homophobia and toxic masculinity and treatment of women, even though I don’t agree with these things, they were things I noticed growing up that I wanted to show as unflinchingly as possible so people could decide for themselves where they fall on that line.
To me, it’s really ugly and it’s really hard to watch a lot of it. That’s by design. And I think it’s interesting to watch it with a crowd of people. You do see people laughing at moments I never would have expected or flinching at moments. And it’s important to see the truth even if it sucks.
And there’s the example of Stevie’s first sexual experience. I wanted to show how terrified he was and the only moment that becomes enjoyable to him is when he realizes it’s currency to
rise up in the animal kingdom of his friends ... those were lessons I saw growing up that we clearly as a society are having to unlearn.
Q So this is a commentary on masculinity?
These kids speak in a way I don’t agree with, they treat women inawayI don’t agree with. But they also are very much there for one another.
JONAH HILL
A Yes. I’m someone who is highly sensitive and emotional and has come a long way in my life in a sense of learning who I am and a sense of being able to communicate my feelings thoughtfully and openly. And part of the humour, part of the harshness, part of the ugliness, part of the joy is watching these people who cannot communicate with one another. And ultimately they teach each other lots of bad lessons and lots of good lessons. And bad and good is not up to me, it’s up to the individual watching.
I have my own feelings, but I don’t like moralist filmmakers. I don’t want to be one. I don’t want to be shoving my views down everyone’s throats. Wolf of Wall Street is a great example where people thought (Scorsese) was celebrating our characters. I can speak for myself, I thought those people were terrible, but you know (Scorsese’s) like, it’s not my job to do that.
Q Why did you focus in on a lower-class setting ?
A Skateboarding for myself, personally, it broke me out of a socio-economic bubble that I would have stayed in my whole life. And skateboarding, like a lot of things, unifies people — it’s common ground.
MID90S
★★★ 1/2 out of 5
Cast: Sunny Suljic, Katherine Waterston, Lucas Hedges, Olan Prenatt, Na-kel Smith, Ryder McLaughlin, Gio Galicia
Director: Jonah Hill
Duration: 1h24m
Jonah Hill’s debut behind the camera is confident, nonchalant and thoughtful. Mid90s vividly reimagines the cultural touchstones of its time and astutely acknowledges the growing pains of a male prepubescent who just wants to be “cool.”
Though the film doesn’t appear to be autobiographical, Hill is precisely the right-aged millennial to be making movies set in that halfway point between the fall of the Berlin Wall and Y2K. For many older millennials who were just beginning to understand the world around them in the mid-’90s, subcultures such as hip hop, grunge and skateboarding were trendy little identities we could try on for size, like a pair of baggy jeans always precariously on the verge of falling down.
That demographic will find a twinge of nostalgic identification with Stevie (Sunny Suljic), a quiet, observant, mop-haired middle-schooler with the kind of dire home environment that encourages escape plans. Stevie’s got a negligent mother (Katherine Waterston), a physically abusive older brother (Lucas Hedges) and zero father figures, so when he finds a hip older crew who hang out at a skateboard shop, the ragamuffin doesn’t foresee any negative consequences.
Some of these dudes think they’re too cool for real names. One nickname (that’s too obscene for a family friendly publication) is given to a biracial wisecracking goof (Olan Prenatt) with long blond curls. His best friend/straight man is Ray (Nakel Smith), who comes closest to being the leader of the crew. He’s the only one with serious ambitions to leave behind their poverty-stricken life. Fourth Grade (Ryder McLaughlin), so dubbed for his low IQ, is meekly content to document the boys’ skateboarding tricks with a clunky camcorder.
These teens drive, smoke, drink and (allegedly) have sex. The riff-raff ’s riffing is reminiscent of the hilarious male-buddy ripostes from Hill-starring films made by Judd Apatow (Knocked Up and Superbad). But, dare I say, the comedy in Mid90s is better.
There’s one last crew member: the youngest of the bunch, Ruben (Gio Galicia), who Stevie first befriends, but as time goes on, becomes a detriment to his status within the group dynamic. Ruben’s insecurity doesn’t go well with the increasingly candid Stevie. Case in point: Ruben tells Stevie not to say “thank you” because “people will think you’re gay.” When Stevie runs this insightful life advice past one of the older teens — who laughs at anyone who would be stupid enough to not have good manners — the light dawns in Stevie’s eyes that not everything everyone says is worth believing.
Stevie’s negligent upbringing is sad but endearing. When his brother isn’t relentlessly pummelling him, Stevie sneaks into his bedroom to admire his sibling ’s meticulously cultivated shrine to hip hop and makes notes from the stacks of CDs and Source magazines for his own research later.
Though Hill has taken cues from classic child-poverty films — most notably Kids — Mid90s doesn’t have the same gravitas to paint a full picture of its impoverished setting. But Hill manages to find a balance between his movie’s severe subject matter and the humour that helps teens like Stevie survive their lonely, malnourished adolescence — hopefully all in one piece.