Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Racing with the Moon (1984) - Review

Racing with the Moon is a drama film - directed by Richard Benjamin - set in a small California coastal town. Sean Penn plays Henry "Hopper" Nash, alongside Nic Cage's Nicky, who both have signed up for the United States draft during World War II. In this liminal time, Hopper and Nicky still have their remaining time to explore whatever youth they still have. During this final exploration, Hopper falls in love and develops a relationship with Caddie Winger, portrayed by Elizabeth McGovern, despite his and Nicky's unfounded assumptions that she is of a higher social status than them. 

Racing with the Moon feels as though it was tailor made for me: it is a slice of life film of a forgotten time, and a forgotten place, that plays out low and slow. I have waxed on about the importance of expressing real human stories in previous reviews, but Racing with the Moon particularly shines in its authenticity of expressing some taboo subjects on screen. Sure, there are clumsy attempts at romance by Cage's Nicky, but these attempts are to flesh out his already established explosive nature - where he nearly lays out Crispin Glover in the beginning of the movie in the bowling alley which Nicky and Hopper work. But clumsy romance is what you might expect of someone who is already known to be hot-headed, let alone a teenage boy on the edge of becoming a man forged by war. The relationship between Hopper and Caddie is pure joy to experience despite the eventual reveal that Caddie doesn't belong to a rich family, but her mother works as a housemaid for the rich family whose house they live in. For almost the entire movie, their relationship is forged and continues despite their individual insecurities about the information they both possess about themselves and each other. Hopper's relationship is the mature counterpart to to Nicky's brash and immature nature. Even moments where Nicky could and should be shamed for callously breaking cultural taboos, he is only shamed by his own immaturity, which adds more weight and evidence to the maturity of other characters.

As stated above, I love a good slice of life movie, and Racing with the Moon captures the spirit of the pending loss of innocence of the two male leads and the struggles that they faced before truly letting the innocence slip away. Nothing that occured in the movie felt inauthentic. In fact, the suspension of disbelief that I usually try to have with film solidified into something more; I was truly lost and captivated in the narrative captured by the filmmakers. I wasn't looking at a fresh Nic Cage, I was looking at Nicky. I didn't see Sean Penn, I saw Hopper. I didn't see any incongruities in the performances displayed and was allowed to be enchanted by the pure art before me. Racing with the Moon stands as an example of what many films aspire to do to its viewers, and what very few achieve, even today. You would do well, regardless of any affinity to Nic Cage, to watch Racing with the Moon and get lost in its exploration of youthful joy, even in the face of certain danger.

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