Earnest drama Just Be There epitomizes the strengths
and weaknesses of low-budget indie filmmaking circa the early ’70s. On the
plus side, the movie has abundant local flavor, with real locations throughout
the Minneapolis/St. Paul area providing the backdrops, and the use of amateur
and semiprofessional actors means there isn’t any trace of Hollywood slickness
in the performances. On the minus side, no film-industry veterans were present
to push producer-star Michael Montgomery outside his comfort zone of gentle
character work, so the picture lacks anything resembling commercial elements.
In fact, it barely even has a story, since Just Be There mostly depicts the protagonist’s angst upon returning from Vietnam. To
Montgomery’s credit, he avoids the cliché of presenting his main character as a
PTSD-addled psycho, but to Montgomery’s detriment, the protagonist handles wartime trauma so well that seems as if he endured a tiring
overseas voyage rather than soul-searing jungle combat. Timidity is the
watchword here, both in terms of the storytelling and the style. And that’s why
Just Be There is such a quintessential indie: Whereas the worst Hollywood pictures bludgeon viewers with
overstatement, Just Be There nearly puts
viewers to sleep with understatement.
The narrative begins with Mitchell
(Montgomery) returning home to his girlfriend, Kathy (Lynn Baker), and his
parents. Dad runs an investment firm selling futures in pork bellies and the
like, while Mom is a housewife. Mitchell longs to write a novel about his
wartime experiences, an ambition that Kathy supports, but Dad wants Mitchell to
join the family business. Upon doing so, Mitchell succumbs to the lure of
steady money and upward mobility. Soon, he is so lost that he begins an affair
with an alluring coworker. Through it all, Mitchell treats Kathy worse and
worse, blowing up whenever she has the temerity to call him on his bullshit.
Yet we, the viewers, are meant to sympathize with Mitchell, because, y’know,
he’s goin’ through a heavy scene, man. Just
Be There is relatively well made, so the movie exists on roughly the level of an advanced film-school project. Because Montgomery never made another picture, it’s unknown whether he could
have improved upon this first effort. Also known as Comin’ Home and Stranger at Home, the movie was reissued—with a change in rating
from PG to R—as Swinging Teacher, so
presumably racy footage was added. These remarks pertain to the original
version.
Just Be There: FUNKY
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