Elephant
United States
2003
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Director Gus Van Sant returned to the low-key style of his early independent efforts with this semi-improvised exploration of how violence makes its way into a typical American high school. Eric (Eric Deulen) and Alex (Alex Frost) are two close friends who are students in a well-to-do suburb of Portland, OR. Eric and Alex are at once ordinary and misfits; while they seem to be confined to the edges of the clique-oriented social strata of high school, little about their behavior draws attention to itself. Or at least not during a typical school day; on their own time, the two boys are fascinated by Nazi iconography, enjoy violent video games, tentatively explore homoerotic desires, and coolly begin to make plans for an armed ambush of the school, drawing up working diagrams of the lunch room during study hall and buying rifles over the Internet. Drawing an expected degree of controversy, Elephant had its world premiere when it was screened in competition at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival, where it won both Best Director for Van Sant and the Golden Palm award.
( From http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0363589/ )
A director who is capable of crafting both deeply unconventional independent films and mainstream crowd-pleasers, Gus Van Sant has managed to carve an enviable niche for himself in Hollywood. Since debuting in 1985 with Mala Noche, Van Sant has become one of the premiere bards of dysfunction, populating his films with a parade of hustlers, junkies, psychopathic weather girls, homicidal teens, and troubled geniuses.
The son of a traveling salesman, Van Sant was born in Louisville, KY, on July 24, 1952. One constant in the director’s early years was his interest in painting and Super-8 filmmaking. Van Sant’s artistic leanings took him to the Rhode Island School of Design in 1970, where introduction to Avant-Garde cinema quickly inspired him to change his major from painting to cinema. After mobving to LA, Van Sant became fascinated by the existence of the marginalized section of L.A.‘s population, especially in context with the more ordinary prosperous world that surrounded them… read more

Gus van Sant has written, directed and edited this film, that delves into the lives of high-school youths. It is all based on the American Columbine massacre committed by Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold… read review
“Whoever finds it boring, has no sense for art.” – Andy Oettl So because I can’t help but be bored looking at endless school hallway tracking shots I have no sense of “art”… read review
Van Sant’s long unbroken tracking shots, most commonly following a student from behind as he or she walks down long, labyrinthine school corridors, becomes the skillfully slow-burning motif of this… read review
This film went in no particular direction. Don’t get me wrong, it’s shot beautifully (in some scenes at least) and the blocking is excellent, and it was intriguing to watch how the focus was pulled… read review