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DIRECTED BY: Richard Cranor
FEATURING: Julian Gavilanes, Tyler Trerise, Shelby Trerise, Russell Hodgkinson
PLOT: Ex-Marine James Hunter is stricken with PTSD after a tour of duty in Afghanistan; back home, he finds a trek to discover the legendary “star leaf” strain of marijuana to be less relaxing than he’d prefer.
WHY IT WON’T MAKE THE LIST: Aliens, drugs, and psychedelia do not a weird movie make. But in the case of Star Leaf, they do somehow make a rather enjoyable exploration of redemption.
COMMENTS: I’ve watched a great many films over the years, both professionally and otherwise, deserving of their IMDb ratings in the low single digits. Some are gloriously inept; others, just straight-up inept. Despite this, it was without trepidation that I sat down to watch Richard Cranor’s stoner/horror/sci-fi outing, Star Leaf. Despite having attended one of those herb-laced, East Coast liberal arts colleges, I’ve never quite understood the allure of marijuana. Fortunately, while Star Leaf is heavy on the cannabis, the weed merely serves as the leafy wrapping over a heart-felt, and fairly funny, musing on PTSD.
James (Julian Gavilanes) is a Marine sniper in the Hindu Kush, stationed with his friend Tim (Tyler Trerise). During a hillside stake-out, Tim encourages James to embrace the “pink mist” and take a shot at a boy whom they witness being fitted with a suicide vest. Fast-forward two years to civilian life in the Pacific Northwest, James, still haunted by this event, joins Tim and his girl Martha (Shelby Trerise) on a different mission: to find, and smoke, the fabled “Star Leaf,” a powerful strain of marijuana allegedly left on earth by extra-terrestrials. Things get crazy and then a little sinister when a strange Park Ranger appears mid-buzz.
There is a lot that Star Leaf doesn’t get right. The extra-terrestrial angle is underdeveloped (or should have been ignored); grey alien-types appear from behind trees every now and again and hassle the drug seekers without much purpose and zero scares. A time-loop/stacked realities “thing” doesn’t stack up logically, even allowing for the speculative physics. And then there’s the final problem that I often have with horror films: having made some fairly interesting characters, the director seems happy enough to kill them off. Or does he?
That final ambiguity is also problematic, but I know I’m giving you the wrong impression. Star Leaf actually hits a lot of right notes: witty banter, a good message, and yet another of those great nightmare-vision police officers (or, as he repeatedly corrects the trio while tapping his shoulder insignia, “Park Ranger”). This sinisterly-stilted entity is played by none-other than director Richard Cranor, and his Ranger Dave goes a long way to making Star Leaf into an odd-ball mix of hipster/stoner “Twilight Zone.” Russell Hodgkinson even appears as the ex-biker, still-Jewish stoner guru (if that name isn’t familiar, he plays a doctor in The Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle). And then there’s the underlying message: forgiveness of one’s self and others. Star Leaf has all the makings of a “throw-away” movie (as well as a “throw-away” review), but it’s one those gems that makes the trash heap worth sifting through.
WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:
Yeah, I was beginning to expect more movies with cannabis as a prominent plot element. Now that states are legalizing and there’s such a thing as a cannabis stock, as in “stock market”, expect to see a lot more of these.
Writing for this market has been one of the major gigs keeping me too busy to have fun reviewing here lately. It will be interesting seeing how modern cannabis culture filters through into movies though. It’s definitely left the Cheech ‘n’ Chong aspect behind (heavens be praised), but it’s also become too normalized to be properly on a double bill with Naked Lunch, either (bummer!).
I was doing a search on my film when this post came up. As the director of Star Leaf, I’m always curious to see if the films larger messages hit home. It seems like they do for some. I’m thankful for your review.
Good morning, Mr Cranor–it’s gratifying to hear from the talent behind the movie.
I’d say that if anyone missed the larger message, they weren’t paying attention. Obviously marijuana is a major strain of the feature, but you use it as a construct on which to hang your actual story. (Which, my concerns mentioned in the review not-with-standing, was very nicely done.)
I hope to see your Ranger Dave again someday.
Cheers.