Apparently Tyler and Michael met Zack at a camp for disabled and non-disabled people and liked him so much that they wrote the movie for him, and although he’s joined here by several famous players, this is nevertheless all about him.
Zak (Zack) is a 22 year old living in a North Carolina
retirement home and deemed a ‘flight risk’ because he has no family and
supposedly can’t look after himself outside. Nevertheless, he keeps trying to
break out with help from cranky roommate Carl (the great Bruce Dern), and when
he finally does, sheer chance leads him to a boat owned by fugitive fisherman
Tyler (Shia LaBeouf filling in at the last minute for his pal Ben Foster). The
troubled Tyler leaves Zak to fend for himself but, later, comes to like the
kid, turning this into a slightly contrived but still sweetly touching buddy
movie, especially when it emerges that Tyler still grieves for his late brother
Mark (Jon Bernthal in silent flashback glimpses that could have been filmed in
one afternoon).
Tyler’s being pursued by rival Duncan (John Hawkes in
nasty mode) and Zak is, in turn, being tailed by carer Eleanor (Dakota
Johnson), and when she finally runs into the pair and sees how they’ve bonded,
this feels a bit improbable but so touching that it hardly matters. When the
three later set off to find Zak’s hero, the ‘Salt Water Redneck’, to fulfill
his dreams of being a professional wrestler and become ‘The Peanut Butter
Falcon’, you might potentially not believe a word of it – although you will
believe in Gottsagen.
Holding his own with the established cast members, Zack plays Zak as a tough, spirited guy, but the script and the film never portray him as cute, saintly or sagely. No, the onscreen Zak is often bewildered, frustrated and angry, which makes him seem real – vividly, sometimes hilariously, even impossibly so.
The Peanut Butter Falcon (M) is in cinemas from 30 January
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