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The songs he wrote are great and I imagine they’ll be invading your radio waves sometime soon, lending the movie some major credibility. And Billie Joe is not just a casting liability, he’s an asset to the soundtrack because he’s written some original music for it, and the movie is never more confidant than when Armstrong is performing. Billie Joe never quite transcends the role, but there is an honest vulnerability there that’s a little charming. The regret without resentment shows maturity I’m surprised to see in a character like Perry. Kirk tries to take a fresh perspective, never blaming the wife and kids for Perry’s lack of success. The theme may be familiar, but I still admired the writing. Plus, Kirk pads the cast with some better talent: Judy Greer as the old flame, Selma Blair as the current wife, Chris Messina as the scowling brother, Fred Armisen as an ex-bandmate. He’s what makes it cool and relevant, makes the movie rise above the other mid-life-crisis\path-not-taken meditations. Very “you can tell I’m acting because my hand is over here on my hip, which means I’m going through some internal conflict I’m not subtle enough to convey any other way.” And yet I’m not going to condemn him because the movie really is a vehicle for him. I, on the other hand, thought it was a scootch worse than that. I mean, the director, Lee Kirk, told us he was a great actor, but the movie seemed to indicate that the Kirk’s pants were on fire. Sean thought he was okay – inoffensive, but he never forgot for a moment that he was watching Billie Joe Armstrong. So then the question you’re next going to ask is: Holy shit, can Billie Joe act? And the answer is no, no he can’t.
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And is it pretty effing cool to see him play the guy he might have been had his own post-punk outfit not taken off when it did? Yes, yes it is. It’s not exactly ground-breaking material but here’s the gimmick that’ll put butts in theatres: it’s Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong playing Perry. But on the occasion of this milestone birthday he decides to treat himself to the wildest party a has-been can muster before noon and he runs in to an old flame who reignites old dreams. He works in a hardware store and only manages to sneak in a few chords around his kids’ morning routine. As he turns 40 he’s stewing in what-ifs, foremost among them, what if I hadn’t left my punk rock band just as it was maybe about to take off? Perry is the Geezer in question, a middle-aged suburban dad with edgy hair and a family he loves, but he’s just a little bit checked out of his ordinary life. Note: when this film premiered at Tribeca, it was called Geezer.
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