When examining the
domestic melodrama Jim, the World’s
Greatest, which concerns alcoholism and child abuse, it’s helpful to
consider that the picture’s co-creators, Don Coscarelli and Craig Mitchell,
were only 17 when their parents bankrolled the low-budget project. Whereas some
movie-crazy kids might have used this opportunity to put sex fantasies or
sports fables onscreen, Coscarelli and Mitchell attempted to diagnose a social
ailment. Therefore, even though the movie doesn’t quite work, thanks to clumsy
plotting and leaden pacing, Jim, the
World’s Greatest is in some ways a noble endeavor. Furthermore, seeing as
how the project got both filmmakers started on idiosyncratic careers, good
things sprang from these humble beginnings.
The “Jim” of the title is a
high-school athlete, Jim Nolan (Gregory Harrison), who lives with his preteen
brother, Kelly (Robbie Wolcott), and their drunken father, Russell (Angus
Scrimm). Because Russell’s emotional problems and substance-abuse issues
prevent him from holding down steady jobs, Jim keeps the family afloat with a
part-time job at a fast-food restaurant. Jim also serves as his little
brother’s protector whenever booze causes Russell to vent his anger by beating
Kelly. The story, which is more of a rambling travelogue through Jim’s life
than a proper narrative, tracks Jim’s struggles to reconcile all the confusing
things he encounters. In terms of girls, Jim likes a smart classmate named
Lisa, even though he appreciates sexual advances from another girl. In terms of
sports, Jim enjoys doing well on the field but seems unsure whether his future
involves athletics or something else. And at home, Jim faces the biggest
challenge—standing up to an abusive parent.
Some of the episodes in this film
connect, such as Jim’s discovery of why his father resents Kelly, and some feel
more like filler, notably a discursive bit during which Jim and Kelly encounter
a hang-glider pilot while they’re out wandering one day. Directors Coscarelli
and Mitchell shoot the film inconsistently, presenting some scenes economically
while letting others drag on and on. Their storytelling is especially unfocused
during the climax and the coda, since the filmmakers wrote themselves into a
corner. However, the overall tone of the film is mature and sincere, with
Harrison endeavoring to infuse his scenes with heartfelt emotion. Accordingly, Jim, the World’s Greatest is best viewed
as a promising first stab at filmmaking, particularly for Coscarelli. Later the
same year, he released his first solo directorial effort, the youth adventure Kenny & Company, and then, three
years later, he found his groove with the cult-fave horror flick Phantasm (1979). The iconic “Tall Man”
character in Phantasm and its many
sequels was played by Angus Scrimm, the bad dad in Jim, the World’s Greatest.
Jim, the World’s Greatest: FUNKY
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