6 reviews
Redboy 13 is a Cold War movie spoof in which a young teenage boy is actually not an innocent youth, but a secret agent working for the government to defeat evil Cold War spies. The problem is that this movie needs a large budget, which van Beval simply doesn't have. Still, his ingenuity is startling. His special effects are appropriately good and cheesy. Unfortunately, it's all too obvious when he's using miniatures, etc. However, it's obvious that van Beval is a director and writer of major talent, and one to be watched.
- Leroytirebiter
- Dec 29, 2006
- Permalink
In the bizarre world of REDBOY 13, the good guys and bad guys alike sport kid's toys for real weapons and fly computer-animated planes and helicopters in their journey to HO-scale miltary camps in the backyard jungle. This film isn't like ANYTHING you've ever seen, a military/spy epic constructed from things you might find in your 13-year old's closet. Robert Logan is pretty much straight-faced through the whole movie as the stone-like, inexplicably omnipotent Colonel Calcan. Roy-Brown is fairly believable as a kid who wields a lunchbox and an Uzi with equal aplomb. It's kind of a tribute to the end of the Cold War, and a pretty funny parody of Rambo III. Follow the links, there's an incredible story about how this was made. The director is some sort of tech whiz who decided to make a movie. He wrote the script, built his own studio and camera crane, wrote his own software for the computer animation, and even performs three different parts in the film (but you would never guess they were the same person). The result is flawed, grandiose, goofy, but brilliant.
Novel idea--taking a promising JROTC member & preparing him for covert ops. Who'd suspect an appealing, supposedly lost & scared teenager is actually a highly-trained assassin? When it comes down to it, Redboy 13 looks like, (and for most intents & purposes) is, the "boy next door". Little did the bad guys know that the cute, skinny kid had an arsenal in his baggy pants, and knew how to use all of it! Redboy (whose code-name came mostly from the color of his hair, which I'd more likely classify as auburn than red), almost blows his cover when a real mini-Uzi gets mixed up with his usual kids' collection of water pistols!
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Viewers would be ill-advised not to take this parody fairly seriously, especially given the remarkable insights provided by the director's surprisingly modest commentary.
In this commentary (available on the DVD), director van Bavel seemed to believe 'a' major defect in the movie is that of Redboy's changing age, necessitated by the fact that the filming took longer than originally anticipated. Perhaps the depth of this issue can be illustrative of the complex art of this marvelously silly parody of films and life.
Yes, at first the viewer wonders if there are two actors. But by the end of the movie, it becomes apparent that this is not a negative at all -- on the contrary.
This is a film with binary themes related to the protagonist: student/super spy, toys/real weapons, the imaginary/the real, the child/the man. When I saw that the child/man theme was so important (the child-warrior theme being an archetypal theme in literature, viz. Joan of Arc, King Arthur, etc.), I began to see that presenting Redboy as of an ambiguous age, first young, then unpredictably older, is certainly one of the greatest and most perceptive strengths of the film, if not the greatest strength. Children, after all, may at first seem incapable, then surprisingly prove to be masters of their situation. The discontinuity of Redboy's age forces the viewer to confront a truth of humanity that can never be so graphically reflected in real life.
Up to now, perhaps only novels have been able to portray characters over a span of time -- or, in film, the comparatively artificial use of several actors to portray one character. It may in fact be that few movies in history have provided us the opportunity to see the protagonist over a wider variation in age and appearance, since, as van Bavel notes, children that age change rapidly.
Granted, if van Bavel had known from the beginning what the filming situation was to be, he almost certainly would have planned things differently -- even if he had in fact made the decision to include scenes from several divergent ages over a couple of years for Redboy. But as it is, I can't imagine apologizing for the fact that Redboy is of varying ages in the film, at least not without major qualification, even if in fact it seemed an accidental development. In fact, as well all know, art is characteristically 'accidental' -- or seems to be at the time. The fact that van Bavel didn't scrap it or re-do the whole thing with another actor is also an artistic decision.
Now, I'm aware, as van Bavel suggests in the commentary, that there is a danger of reading into the film more than is there, but as I say, even if the age issue was unplanned, that does not make it any less valid a strength, and I wouldn't wonder if it is not, consciously or unconsciously, one of the reasons for the admirable success of the film.
In this commentary (available on the DVD), director van Bavel seemed to believe 'a' major defect in the movie is that of Redboy's changing age, necessitated by the fact that the filming took longer than originally anticipated. Perhaps the depth of this issue can be illustrative of the complex art of this marvelously silly parody of films and life.
Yes, at first the viewer wonders if there are two actors. But by the end of the movie, it becomes apparent that this is not a negative at all -- on the contrary.
This is a film with binary themes related to the protagonist: student/super spy, toys/real weapons, the imaginary/the real, the child/the man. When I saw that the child/man theme was so important (the child-warrior theme being an archetypal theme in literature, viz. Joan of Arc, King Arthur, etc.), I began to see that presenting Redboy as of an ambiguous age, first young, then unpredictably older, is certainly one of the greatest and most perceptive strengths of the film, if not the greatest strength. Children, after all, may at first seem incapable, then surprisingly prove to be masters of their situation. The discontinuity of Redboy's age forces the viewer to confront a truth of humanity that can never be so graphically reflected in real life.
Up to now, perhaps only novels have been able to portray characters over a span of time -- or, in film, the comparatively artificial use of several actors to portray one character. It may in fact be that few movies in history have provided us the opportunity to see the protagonist over a wider variation in age and appearance, since, as van Bavel notes, children that age change rapidly.
Granted, if van Bavel had known from the beginning what the filming situation was to be, he almost certainly would have planned things differently -- even if he had in fact made the decision to include scenes from several divergent ages over a couple of years for Redboy. But as it is, I can't imagine apologizing for the fact that Redboy is of varying ages in the film, at least not without major qualification, even if in fact it seemed an accidental development. In fact, as well all know, art is characteristically 'accidental' -- or seems to be at the time. The fact that van Bavel didn't scrap it or re-do the whole thing with another actor is also an artistic decision.
Now, I'm aware, as van Bavel suggests in the commentary, that there is a danger of reading into the film more than is there, but as I say, even if the age issue was unplanned, that does not make it any less valid a strength, and I wouldn't wonder if it is not, consciously or unconsciously, one of the reasons for the admirable success of the film.