• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertising
  • Join PGM
Pepperdine Graphic

Pepperdine Graphic

  • News
    • Good News
  • Sports
    • Hot Shots
  • Life & Arts
  • Perspectives
    • Advice Column
    • Waves Comic
  • GNews
    • Staff Spotlights
    • First and Foremost
    • Allgood Food
    • Pepp in Your Step
    • DunnCensored
    • Beyond the Statistics
  • Special Publications
    • 5 Years In
    • L.A. County Fires
    • Change in Sports
    • Solutions Journalism: Climate Anxiety
    • Common Threads
    • Art Edition
    • Peace Through Music
    • Climate Change
    • Everybody Has One
    • If It Bleeds
    • By the Numbers
    • LGBTQ+ Edition: We Are All Human
    • Where We Stand: One Year Later
    • In the Midst of Tragedy
  • Currents
    • Currents Spring 2025
    • Currents Fall 2024
    • Currents Spring 2024
    • Currents Winter 2024
    • Currents Spring 2023
    • Currents Fall 2022
    • Spring 2022: Moments
    • Fall 2021: Global Citizenship
    • Spring 2021: Beauty From Ashes
    • Fall 2020: Humans of Pepperdine
    • Spring 2020: Everyday Feminism
    • Fall 2019: Challenging Perceptions of Light & Dark
  • Podcasts
    • On the Other Hand
    • RE: Connect
    • Small Studio Sessions
    • SportsWaves
    • The Graph
    • The Melanated Muckraker
  • Print Editions
  • NewsWaves
  • Sponsored Content
  • Digital Deliveries
  • DPS Crime Logs

Plot thickens with AKAs

April 6, 2006 by Pepperdine Graphic

JULIE ONI
Staff Writer

Nicknamed characters always signify an original story. Only well-rounded individuals can be crafted in such a way as to reduce their persona to one single word. If you look up the character cast listing for Rian Johnson’s new film “Brick,” you will find a plethora of epithets that can’t help but inspire interest in the story: The Pin, Tug, The Brian, Dode Big Stoner and Straggler are just a few of these.

The use of codes, AKAs and alias names augments the effective intensity of this modern film noir mystery drama.

The story begins with a murder, and from start to finish, the objective of the characters is to unravel the mystery of “who done it.”

Codes are used to depict the various meeting places, and every object becomes a possible clue to the mystery.

The multi-faceted Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays Brendan, a loner determined to discover the truth about the death of his ex-girlfriend, Emily (Emilie de Ravin).

A series of beat downs to Brendan by Tug (Noah Fleiss), another angry ex of the victim, and Brad (Brian J. White), the captain of the football team among others, happen. Brendan decides he can’t do it all on his own.

He joins forces with a gang led by Pin (Lukas Haas), a bird-obsessed cane-walker with no explanation of his supposed handicap (he may just carry the cane to maintain an appearance of authority).

Pin is the leader of a drug-dealing gang and decides to allow Brendan to help him combat the evils of their small-town world.

A verbal reason is never given for Pin’s nickname, nor is his real name exposed, but the symbolism of the character unfolds throughout the story: He works from his basement, where he prepares his business with “pen and paper” at a small wooden desk.

And there’s more. “Pen name” is another was to say nickname. Get it?

The Brian, Brendan’s inside man, obtains his significance through his title. This informant is not just Brian. He is The Brian. This simple addition

completely changes the importance of the character. The information he gives is crucial, and he is irreplaceable.

 Johnson’s writing and direction create an atmosphere that allows the characters to become real, even in an extreme and somewhat unbelievable

situation.

Yet the determination of Pin, Tug and the rest adds credibility to the story. Under the circumstances, their actions are believable, and death, murder and

violence are not out of the question.

The tension among the array of characters also adds credibility to the resulting violence. Everyone is so determined to have his or her way that someone must be trampled over if anything is to be

accomplished.

Several successful films have nicknamed characters, but few are capable of utilizing these symbols as a crucial part of the script. In a mystery story, the birth names of most characters involved are a mystery as well.

The nominal identities of Tug, Pin and Straggler are not important. What is important is that each character has something that only he or she can offer, and that something is essential to

uncovering the mystery of Emily’s death.

These characters don’t need real names. Johnson has created magnificent archetypes.

And now, a final epithet of the story: the title. What, exactly, does Brick mean?

Here’s a small hint: It’s the most important symbol in the story, and there is no way you are gonna drag it out of me. Hurry to the theaters and discover the dynamism of nickname intensity and epitheted enemy-accomplices who breathe excellence into the mystery of “Brick.”

04-06-2006

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Primary Sidebar

Categories

  • Featured
  • News
  • Life & Arts
  • Perspectives
  • Sports
  • Podcasts
  • G News
  • COVID-19
  • Fall 2021: Global Citizenship
  • Everybody Has One
  • Newsletters

Footer

Pepperdine Graphic Media
Copyright © 2025 · Pepperdine Graphic

Contact Us

Advertising
(310) 506-4318
peppgraphicadvertising@gmail.com

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
(310) 506-4311
peppgraphicmedia@gmail.com
Student Publications
Pepperdine University
24255 Pacific Coast Hwy
Malibu, CA 90263
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube