Empire (UK)

FRESHMAN YEAR

★★★★ OUT 1 OCTOBER (DIGITAL) CERT 15 / 101 MINS

- JOHN NUGENT

DIRECTOR Cooper Raiff

CAST Cooper Raiff, Dylan Gelula, Amy Landecker, Logan Miller, Olivia Welch

PLOT Alex (Raiff) is a student in his first year at college, his first time away from home. He’s lonely and struggling. An evening spent with Maggie (Gelula) changes the way he sees things. But when Maggie ignores him the following day, can he still salvage his college experience?

IN THE US, this film goes by the name of Shithouse, the kind of title which implies a college movie in the Animal House tradition: all about getting drunk, getting laid, and occasional­ly puking. The blandly-renamedbut-eminently-more-marketable Freshman Year deals in all three traditions — but, in a refreshing­ly revolution­ary move, suggests that they might not always be healthy.

For a lot of kids, leaving home for the first time with bad social skills, wobbly mental health and limited alcohol experience means the college experience can actually really suck. That’s certainly where we meet Alex (Cooper Raiff, on multi-hyphenate filmmaking duties), who has spent most of his term hiding in his dorm, forced to tolerate his obnoxious roommate Sam (Logan Miller) smoking weed — and, in one excruciati­ng scene, shitting his pants — in the bed next to him.

As he admits to his mother in one of their regular tearful phone calls, Alex feels like “a new-born baby”: totally helpless with the sudden weight of adulthood thrust on him, and completely alienated in a stressful and confusing place. Raiff gives a heartbreak­ing and intensely vulnerable performanc­e as a sensitive 19-yearold still figuring his brain out, possessing a raw awkwardnes­s not seen since Elsie Fisher’s devastatin­g turn in 2018’s Eighth Grade.

A sudden burst of self-imposed socialisin­g sees Alex going to a pretty awful-looking house party. The party results in a couple of authentica­lly terrible bedroom fumbles (including, arguably, the shortest and therefore funniest sex scene of the year). But it at least leads Alex to meet Maggie (Dylan Gelula, hugely impressive); over the course of a drunken evening, they make an unsuccessf­ul attempt at sex, and then get to know each other, in that order.

Nearly an hour of running time is then devoted to their meet cute, as Freshman

Year quickly evolves into a gorgeous hangout movie in the Linklater mould: a Gen-z Dazed And Confused. Plot falls away, as Alex and Maggie wander around campus, swig from a $3 bottle of wine, flirt, share secrets from their past, emotionall­y expose themselves a little, and bury a recently passed pet turtle. The dialogue is light on substance but rich in realism: they’re talking about nothing, which makes it feel like everything.

It’s rare to see young people depicted so honestly or so simply — not to mention, as told by genuine young people. Raiff, who dropped out of college to complete the film, was just 23 when he wrote, directed, edited and starred in it; his clear talent and ability is, frankly, almost maddening. The film certainly owes a debt to the low-key indie shoulders it stands on (Jay Duplass, who shot a cameo that didn’t make the final cut, is an obvious influence), and it has the requisite shoegaze soundtrack to match the detached directing style. And some, admittedly, might find the earnestly romantic final act a little too neat. But it feels earned. This a college experience that takes it all in: from the lovestruck to the pants-shitters.

VERDICT

As a sensitive portrait of what college is like for the awkward lonely types — and an ode to just staying up late and shooting the shit — Freshman Year is a funny, tender treat.

 ?? ?? Wigging out: Sam (Logan Miller, left) and Alex (Cooper Raiff).
Wigging out: Sam (Logan Miller, left) and Alex (Cooper Raiff).

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