SPOILER ALERT! The plot will be discussed!
Stand by Me (1986), which shares its title with the great Ben E. King song, was directed by Rob Reiner and is based on a story by Stephen King (two kings make a great pair here). The tale takes place in the summer of 1959 in the form of a reminiscence by the narrator who is The Writer (Richard Dreyfuss). He thinks about the first time he saw a dead body after reading about a death in the newspaper. Even though it’s been many years since he was twelve years old, the memory has haunted him his whole life.The main characters are young boys who are in a transition period between being children and becoming adults. The Writer is the grownup Gordie Lachance (Will Wheaton). They play cards in a tree house as kids will do, but Chris Chambers (River Phoenix) and Teddy DuChamp (Corey Feldman) smoke cigarettes, showing they are rebelling against childhood norms. The screenplay is effective as they engage in trashy put-down comments which fit their age group. The Writer notes that “finding new and preferably disgusting ways to degrade a friend’s mother was always held in high regard.” The Writer comments that Teddy acted crazy for a reason because his violent father almost burned off the boy’s ear once. Chris, their leader, came from a “bad” family also, and according to The Writer, was expected to have a “bad” life (unfortunately true for the actor River Phoenix, whose early death was a shocker). The film suggests that external factors can abnormally thrust children out of their carefree innocence.
One of the boys’ crew, Vern Tessio (Jerry O’Connell)
enters the treehouse with news. While searching for where he buried his coins
under the house porch, Vern overheard from his brother, Billy (Casey Siemaszko)
and his pal, Charlie Hogan (Gary Riley) the location of a young dead boy, Ray
Brower, who went missing. The older teens stole a car and that was why they
were near the train tracks where they found the dead boy. Since Billy and
Charlie are staying clear of the police, the younger boys think they can get
credit for finding the body. Youths enjoy pretending to be heroes and these
boys sing the title songs of old TV shows that told cowboy stories, which shows
that desire.
As the kids concoct alibis to free them up for their
quest, The Writer notes that his mother (Frances Lee McCain) and father (Marshall
Bell) were traumatized by the death of Gordie’s older brother, Denny (played in
flashback by John Cusack) in a car accident, another initiation into the
harshness of the world. Gordie’s dad is disappointed in Gordie for not having
friends as admirable as Denny’s pals. So, these boys have something to prove to
themselves, let alone others, that they are not losers.
Chris catches up with Gordie on their way to meet the other boys. He took his dad’s handgun, and Chris accidentally fires off a round into a trash can behind a restaurant. The firearm holds adult fascination for the boys, but its explosive deadliness also is frightening, which again stresses their cusp of adulthood predicament. The boys encounter Chris’s older brother Eyeball (Bradley Gregg), and Ace Merrill (Kiefer Sutherland), who overpowers the younger boys and steals the New York Yankees cap Denny gave to Gordie. That act is particularly hurtful to Gordie who loved his brother, and Ace’s theft is a desecration of Gordie’s memory of Denny. The preteens wish they were older and bigger so they could defend themselves (a foreshadowing), which stresses their in-between stage of growth. (There is a short later scene where Ace and the other teenagers drive a car and knock mailboxes off their posts with a baseball bat. Subsequent scenes with these older boys show that the next stage of maleness is full of rebelliousness, egotism, obsessions over sex, foolishness, and danger).The boys follow the train tracks with their gear and are supposed to travel around twenty or thirty miles, quite a stretch for these youths. They act like adventurous men, but are not responsible enough to remember to bring any food. Vern says he remembered to bring a comb, which is funny, but also stresses immaturity. A locomotive approaches, but Teddy wants to play “dodge train,” waiting for the last moment to get off the tracks. He pretends he is meeting the enemy at Normandy on D-Day. The scene is reminiscent of playing “chicken” in Rebel Without a Cause, where the adolescents head to a cliff in cars and are supposed to jump out at the last minute. Here is the same combination of adult male bravado and youthful recklessness. Teddy’s father, who was a hero in the war at Normandy, went insane, possibly due to war trauma, and is now in a mental institution. There may be a subconscious desire to prove his bravery so he can measure up to his father’s war heroics. Chris saves Teddy from himself by pulling him off the tracks.The young boys flex their rule-breaking potential by scaling a junkyard fence despite the warning not to trespass. They use the water pump there to hydrate and then goof around. The child in each of them still watches The Micky Mouse Club, but their budding manhood focuses on Annette Funicello’s breasts. Gordie loses the coin toss, and he has to go to the store nearby for food. The grocer recognizes Gordie as Denny’s brother. He also lost a brother, only in Korea. He quotes the Bible that says death is there amid life. Tragedy seems to be something that we never outgrow.
The grocer talks about what a great football player
Denny was. That remark triggers a dinner table memory where Gordie’s father is obsessed
with Denny and his ball playing. Denny goes out of the way to talk about how
good a writer Gordie is, but the father ignores the praise for his other son. Older
males, like Mr. Lachance and the grocer, don’t see writing as masculine, so
they focus on the athletic, muscular nature of sports.
By the time Gordie returns to the junkyard, the owner,
Milo Pressman (William Bronder) has returned, and the rest of the boys are on
the other side of the fence. Gordie runs with all his might and climbs over the
barrier just in time to escape the junkyard dog, Chopper. The animal was
supposed to be this fearsome creature, but he turns out to be not that
threatening. The Writer says it was his first revelation about how myth did not
measure up to reality, another growth moment.
After getting upset when Pressman recognizes him and
ridicules his father, Teddy says he is spoiling his friends’ fun. But the
maturing Gordie says maybe they shouldn’t be treating their journey as a “party”
since they are going to “see a dead kid.” So, this journey is a symbolic one, a
rite of passage which leads away from childhood.
After falling asleep, howling coyotes awaken the boys.
They take turns standing guard, and despite Teddy’s acting like a military
sentry, and Vern’s exaggerated startle response to every sound, the scene is
disturbing since they are pointing Chris’s handgun. The next scene depicts the outcast
feelings of Gordie and Chris. Gordie has a nightmare where he pictures himself
at the grave of his brother and his father tells Gordie it should have been him
in the casket. He wakes up and joins Chris, and suggests to his friend he can
also take college classes. Chris says that the community considers his family
dangerous lowlifes, and presume they are guilty instead of innocent if a
transgression takes place. He stole the school milk money, implying that being
law-abiding would not better his family reputation because of the residents’
prejudices. But he gave the money back to the teacher who showed up with a brand-new
skirt she had been eyeing. Chris begins to cry since he found out how crushing
it was to find that even a schoolteacher can be so devious. It is an example of
losing innocence and moving toward cynicism concerning life’s realities. Chris
says he wishes he “could go someplace where nobody knows me,” which would allow
him to live without others unfairly judging him.
The older boys led by Ace find out about the dead boy
from Billie and Charlie. Ace decides that they will get the praise for finding
the missing boy. On their drive, Ace races against a group of boys in another
car. When a truck hauling lumber heads straight at him, Ace refuses to exit the
lane. The trucker goes off the road to avoid a collision, losing his cargo. Ace
says, “I won,” as if beating death is a contest. Ace’s toxic masculinity will
most likely grow stronger as he gets older, and the scene shows the destructive
road men may travel down because of the macho attitudes that society fosters.
Meanwhile, the kids, abandoning the safety of the train
tracks that can represent civilization, cut through a forest as a shortcut. In
literature, writers have used forests as the places where unlawful or dangerous
activities take place (think The Scarlet Letter, Tess of the
D’Urbervilles, The Princess Bride). They misjudge the depth of a
river they cross and find themselves in water up to their shoulders. Teddy
starts to be mischievous and dunks Vern. Chris tells him to “act your age.”
Teddy rightfully says he is acting his age. The boys, except for the anti-party
Gordie, start dunking each other. They are in a perilous situation which calls
for adult thinking, but they are still playful children in that place. When
they discover that leeches have attached themselves to their bodies, the
serious nature of their quest sobers them up as they pull the creatures off
their bodies.
At that moment, Ace and his gang show up and threaten to beat up the youngsters if they don’t give up the body. Chris will not back down. Ace starts to cross that legal line that the remote forest removes, and pulls a knife. As he is ready to cut Chris, Gordie shoots off a warning shot from the gun, playing its part as the equalizer, which Chris brought. Gordie aims his wild card weapon with a steady hand at Ace, who decides to fold. But, Ace issues a warning about the boys’ futures (a foreshadowing).
After besting the older boys, the younger ones probably feel the quest was what was important and they no longer have the need to get credit for finding the body. They leave it there and decide to make an anonymous phone call to have it found. They head back to their town, which, according to The Writer, “seemed smaller.” They have grown up some on their journey and things aren’t as large or magical when one revisits a childhood place.
The Writer says that Gordie and Chris didn’t see as
much of Vern and Teddy as they grew up. Many of us lose track of friends who we
bonded with when younger as life’s situations place us on divergent roads. Vern
settled into the grownup world, getting married, having four kids, and working as
a forklift operator. Teddy couldn’t get into the military because of his vision
defects and ear injury, courtesy of his father. He was also in jail a few
times. Some sins of the father can’t be erased from the marks they leave on the
children. Chris did escape the judgment of the town, going to college and
becoming a lawyer. But he went into a fast-food restaurant, tried to break up a
fight, was stabbed in the throat, and died. He couldn’t escape that knife that threatened
him in his youth. It was his death that Gordie was reading about that initiated
the memory of finding the body. The Writer, the adult Gordie, has a boy of his
own now, as the cycle continues, is finishing typing the memoir we have been
hearing. He had not been in touch with Chris for over ten years, but he knows will
miss his best friend “forever.”
The last lines he types say that he never made friends
like the ones he had when he was twelve, and asks, “Jesus, does anyone?” Don’t
we all hold onto those days when we shared our early years with precious others
while we were in that state of becoming?
The next film is Donnie Darko.
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