Stars:
Ian McKellen, Brad Renfro, Joshua JacksonStoryline
Neighborhood boy Todd Bowden (Renfro) discovers that an old man living on his block named Arthur Denker (Mackellan) is Nazi war criminal. Bowden confronts Denker and offers him a deal: Bowden will not go to the authorities if Denker tells him stories of the concentration camps in WWII. Denker agrees and Bowden starts visiting him regularly. The more stories Bowden hears, the more it affects his personality.User Reviews
Learning to be evilStephen King's Apt
Pupil, which is part of the novella collection Different Seasons
(alongside the stories that inspired The Shawshank Redemption and Stand
by Me), is a valid example of how you don't need things to be openly
supernatural to have a good scary tale: a "human" incarnation of pure
evil will do just as fine, and few images are more effective than those
of the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis during WWII.
Okay,
minor correction: WWII has virtually nothing to do with this story,
given it takes place in 1984. There is a Nazi involved, though: his name
is Kurt Dussander (Ian McKellen), but he's been living quite peacefully
in your average American neighborhood under the name Arthur Denker.
However, a young boy named Todd Bowden (Brad Renfro from the
Grisham-inspired The Client) manages to uncover the old man's real
identity thanks to some thorough research and tells him about the
discovery. The unexpected thing is, Todd doesn't want to report
Dussander to the police. What he really wants is to learn everything -
and he repeatedly emphasizes the word "everything" - about the former
Nazi's work under Hitler's regime. Soon enough, the perverse bond
between the two starts affecting the boy's grades and behavior, and
Dussander isn't unaffected either: somewhere deep inside lies the old
Nazi, and that part of his personality would like to come out and play.
The
film's screenplay sticks quite faithfully to the basic idea of King's
story and reproduces some of the most famous scenes verbatim (except for
one moment of animal cruelty, which had to be softened), although a few
subplots are excised, presumably for the sake of length and pace. The
downside of that is an occasional lack of detail, especially when it
comes to the development of Renfro's character. Director Bryan Singer,
who obviously found himself in an uncomfortable position to begin with,
having to live up to the success of The Usual Suspects, makes up for
this flaw by constructing a genuinely tense and unnerving atmosphere,
adding to the moral ambiguity by highlighting the homosexual subtext
already present in the book (when Todd tells Dussander to f*ck himself,
the latter replies: "My dear boy, can't you see? We're f*cking each
other.").
Acting-wise, the limelight is inevitably placed on the
leading duo, even if the supporting cast, which includes fine character
actors like Bruce Davison and Elias Koteas, is quite strong (with the
exception of David "Ross" Schwimmer, who isn't entirely at ease in a
serious role). Renfro's performance is solid and captivating enough, but
like his character he is completely overshadowed by the superb,
unsettling McKellen, who inhabits the role of Dussander with his usual
Shakespearean grandeur. Case in point: the unforgettable moment when the
old man is forced to wear an old SS uniform Todd got his hands on.
McKellen carries out the assignment with the dignity of a great tragic
thespian, nailing the scene as one of the essential samples of his film
career.
Apt Pupil distances itself from The Shawshank Redemption
and Stand by Me in that it isn't as accomplished, most notably when it
comes to the inevitable book/film comparison. Then again, it tells a
much darker story, which asks the audience to root for a psychotic
teenager and an aging Nazi. Flawed it may be, but it certainly is
interesting (not to mention carried by an astounding McKellen). It is
indeed a different season.
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