Tuesday, December 22, 2015

The Quick and Dirties: Girl Power #2


It's time for another edition of The Quick and Dirties. For the uninitiated, these are posts where I give rather short reviews to a number of films, usually surrounding some loosely defined theme. In this case, I'm revisiting a topic I did a few weeks back during Girl Week. That topic is movies with a female protagonist. Let's not keep these ladies waiting...

The Divergent Series: Insurgent
(2015)
After the events of the first movie, our heroine Tris (Shailene Woodley) is on the run from the government. She is also working with her beau in trying to form a resistance. Nah, this doesn't sound familiar at all. Sigh. Another pointless entry in The Hunger Games Lite Divergent franchise. In a supermarket, the store brand is a knock-off of a name brand product. It's not exactly the same, but a reasonable facsimile. The key selling point is the cheaper price. The Divergent series, with its smaller budgets, lesser known cast, and similar enough story, is pretty clearly a knock-off of The Hunger Games. Its highlights and mistakes are similar, with a few extra mistakes thrown in. Since it costs the same to see most every movie, and this fails to differentiate itself in any significant fashion, this really has no reason to exist. This isn't to say I found Insurgent completely terrible, just completely uninspired. Woodley tries mightily to elevate material that is thoroughly derivative and predictable. There are some heavyweights here, like Kate Winslet in the villain-role for the second time, but she appears to be sleepwalking through the film. The twist that gives us our conclusion feels like it should end the series, but instead sets up a third movie. Some really nice action sequences along the way, particularly late as Tris is trying to pass a series of tests, keep us at least a little interested. Still, the whole thing engenders a "been there, done that" feeling that's nigh impossible to shake.


Rachel Getting Married
(2008)
Drug addict Kym (Hathaway) leaves rehab for a few days to attend her sister Rachel’s (Rosemarie Dewitt) wedding. The first thing that jumps out at you is the documentary style look of the film. It’s a major tool in grounding the movie in reality and gives us a “you are there” feel. To foster the illusion you need natural and genuine feeling performances from the cast. Beginning with Hathaway, this ensemble delivers in spades. She hits all right notes and her co-stars follow suit. Her chemistry with Dewitt is explosive. To complete the trick, the script has to also be excellent and it is indeed. Therefore, even the most dramatic moments seem to be the organic result of the lives these people led before we met them and not manufactured by some writer attempting to create big moments. In keeping with that aesthetic, it’s also a true slice-of-life tale. Though there are plenty of conflicts, there is no ending in the traditional movie sense. Occasionally, it goes a little too far to maintain that feeling of reality. It does this by letting the extraneous things go on a bit long. A couple different times, we get a parade of relatives toasting the bride and groom. Both scenes could’ve been streamlined a lot. Finally, as much as we get from most of our main characters, we get nothing from Sidney (Tunde Adebimpe), the groom. Here’s a guy trying to get through the most important event in his life and all of the drama of his fiancĂ©’s family is exploding everywhere around him yet all he can do is stand around with a stupid grin on his face. It makes us question why Rachel would marry such a stiff. Still, for those of you into drama, family drama in particular, this is a gold mine. It’s both genuine and stirring. As I mentioned earlier, Hathaway and Dewitt are both outstanding.


The DUFF
(2015)
The acronym DUFF, we're told, stands for "designated ugly, fat friend." We're also told that to be a DUFF one doesn't have to be ugly or fat. You just have to be less attractive that everyone else in your circle of friends and act as a buffer between them and other undesirables. Through some harsh interactions with her super-jock next door neighbor, Bianca (Mae Whitman) finds out that she is, in fact, a DUFF. In an effort to shed this status, she strikes a deal with the handsome neighbor Wesley (Robbie Amell). She'll help him pass science and, in return, he'll help her snag the attention of the boy of her dreams. It's a generic, predictable ugly-duckling story that manages to be funny in spots. It's not a bad movie, per se. It's just one that plays out precisely as you think it will every step of the way.


The Secret Life of Bees
(2008)
Lily (Dakota Fanning) accidentally shot and killed her mother when she was four years old. Now, as a teen she has a strained relationship with her father and runs away with her Black housekeeper, Rosaleen (Jennifer Hudson), in tow. That last bit is important because we're in the South in the 1960s. Melodrama ensues. This film shows the beginning of Dakota Fanning transitioning from a strange little girl who stares blankly at the camera into a more mature actress. She demonstrates a solid range of emotion. However, I must admit that her ghostly paleness still gives me the creeps. That's a me problem, though. Queen Latifah gives the movie a solid foundation. She is a talented actress, but for this role she calls most on the attribute that once made her a rap star, a regal presence. The script weaves in its life-lessons nicely. Perhaps heavy-handedly shot through a yellowish filter for a number of scenes, the movie nonetheless manages to have a really nice look to it. One of the things that might be a major plus for some, but a major negative for others is that it's constantly begging you to cry. Like it's most unstable character, May (Sophie Okonedo), it takes every disappointing situation like a major tragedy. Like women in your average gangster movie, men in this unabashed chick-flick are merely periphery players, with the exception of young Zach (Tristan Wilds). The problem is the movie would've benefitted if Lily's father were of a presence. In all, this is a fairly solid melodrama with some strong performances and its heart in the right place. At times, it's a bit manipulative but that comes with the genre. The Secret Life of Bees is a must-see for people who enjoy crying along with the characters on the screen, decent enough, but a bit predictable and mushy for the rest of us.


Yelling to the Sky
(2011)
Sweetness (Zoe Kravitz) is a girl dealing with lots of issues. We meet her as she is getting beaten up by the local group of wayward teens while trying to walk home from high school. She's rescued by her pregnant older sister Ola (Antonique Smith) who puts the smack-down on some dude. At home, there are more problems. Mom (Yolonda Ross) appears to be bipolar, or suffer from some similar malady. She disappears for days, weeks, or maybe even months at a time. When she returns, or more likely, gets retrieved by Dad (Jason Clarke) she is in a near-catatonic state and remains that way for quite a while. Dad is an abusive drunk and reason his wife often takes off. Neither seems to be working so its no surprise that poverty sits on top of all that. In an effort to rise above these circumstances, Sweetness takes up with Roland (Black Thought of The Roots), a drug dealer with a heart of gold. I desperately wanted to love this film thanks to a fantastic turn by the underrated Kravitz (also appearing in Insurgent, by the way) and the fact the movie has something to say. At least, it feels like it has something to say. Unfortunately, whatever it is trying to convey is jumbled, implausible, and tinged with the "White Savior" cliche. Those of you who haven't seen it are in a bit of a quandary. See it for the Kravitz performance, and a very nice one by Gabourey Sidibe as Sweetness's rival, or skip it for the mess it makes of itself.


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10 comments:

  1. One thing of note in Rachel Getting Married--in many a film, the fact that Rachel and Sidney are of different races would be the focus of the film. Here, it's not even mentioned (that I recall) and if it was, it's certainly not a plot point. If nothing else, the film is notable for that.

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    1. I totally agree with that. I'm pretty sure it never gets mentioned. While I was watching it for the first time back in either '08 or '09, I kept waiting for someone to bring it up. Refreshingly, no one did.

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  2. Fantastic concept. Love it. I have only seen the first two of the five. Sounds like the others have some decent pieces but overall are a little "meh"?

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    1. Thanks. "Meh" is a very good way to describe the rest of them.

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  3. Rachel Getting Married is a film I love as I felt it is this great portrait of family dysfunctions with Anne Hathaway being this hot mess. I haven't seen the other films though I did see some of Insurgent and.... man, it is fucking bad. No wonder it didn't do as well as the first and why the franchise is just going.... eh.... on everyone.

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    1. RGM is a fantastic film and Hathaway is totally a hot mess. Insurgent...yeah, they should stop.

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  4. I love Rachel Getting Married and I have a soft spot for The Secret Life of Bees. Nice write up!

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    1. Thanks. I know a few people that have a soft spot for that one.

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  5. I thought The DUFF was really funny. Totally predictable, but Mae Whitman is charming and unconventional enough to raise at least a little bit above the standard teen movie. I find Rachel Getting Married to be a wonderful slice of life, as you know from my recent Thursday Picks. What Demme did with music in that film is so great. That aspect breathes life into the Sidney character at least a little bit. When you do Neil Young's "Unknown Legend" as your wedding vow, you're hardly a "stiff." But Adebebimpe is pretty much a non-actor, so maybe that had to do with it. He's the frontman for the band TV on the Radio. Really cool band. The Divergent movies are complete and utter garbage.

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    1. I didn't hate The DUFF. It has some funny parts, but I did find it rather meh. Thanks for the info on Adebebimpe. I've never heard of him anywhere other than this movie. Yes, the Divergent flicks suck.

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