Director: Drew
Barrymore | Starring:
Ellen Page, Marcia Gay Harden, Kristen Wiig,
Drew Barrymore, Juliette Lewis, Jimmy Fallon, Eve
Released: 2009
| Runtime: 111m
| Rating (out of 5):
**½ |
Buy on Amazon
|
Full disclosure: Ms.
Hipster loves The
Wedding Singer. That shit is on 27 times a year and she will watch
it every time. Thusly, I too have seen that movie a million times.
I've also seen Poison
Ivy, Never
Been Kissed, both Charlie's
Angels, Music
and Lyrics, 50
First Dates, Fever
Pitch, Grey
Gardens and on and on. And ET
is like one of my favorite movies at all time. So I guess you could
say I've seen a ton of Drew Barrymore over the years. I understand
her aesthetic. I could probably even do a decent imitation of her
acting style, which is somehow terrible, goofy and endearing at the
same time. Divorcing her from her characters is always difficult.
And that's what made Grey Gardens almost unwatchable. But when
I saw she was directing this oddball little film starring everyone's
midget crush, Ellen Paige, I both knew exactly what I was going to
get and wanted to see it anyway.
What I got was a coming of age story set in a sleepy town in Texas
about a girl whose dreams are bigger than her mailperson mother's
pageants and an eventual job at the post office. Sound familiar? Yes,
it's ground that's been tread and retread. The twist here is that
her way out is roller derby in Austin! The character that Ellen Paige
will remind you of, not surprisingly, is her snarky, smarter than
her age Juno. The movie proceeds along these
lines as she meets a boy from the "big city" (oddly played by a musical
artist whose Website I worked on, Landon
Pigg), lies to her parents about what she's doing and moves up
the ladder of the local roller derby strata. Her nemesis on the rink
is Juliet Lewis, who basically plays herself, sneering and drawling
and acting like a basic sneering, drawling freak. Kristen Wiig, who
is surprisingly good having never seen her in anything but MacGruber
skits on SNL, is her surrogate mother while doing the roller
derby thing and what I could tell from his voice, but don't recall
seeing him since Bottle
Rocket, is another Wilson brother, Andrew Wilson, who plays their
altruistic, albeit winless, coach. The cast is actually pretty decent
and Barrymore keeps it together in her directorial debut, though the
actual roller derby scenes are overall really lackluster and pretty
pathetic based on what I remember of the sport from the '70s. Oh,
George Michael's cousin from Arrested
Development plays the straight A friend, and is pretty funny in
her role, although I found it hard to stop staring at her funky face
(or Funkë face for you AD fans).
The film is a little too all over the place to considered a total success, but there are certainly moments where Barrymore coaxes poignancy and what seem like genuine feeling out of her actors. Granted, a lot of the emotion of the film is just one degree off from cheese, but I'm sure that serves her audience well. The script is more quirky, really, than funny, but there are a couple light moments that are cute and some that are relatively adorable (for lack of a better word), just like their creator. I think Ms. Barrymore has a good kernel of something here, as her rapport with her fellow thespians seems to come across on screen, and she spins a decent yarn that hits a solid single. Hopefully with her future endeavors she'll strengthen her visual directorial prowess, but never lose that indomitable spirit. [HBO On Demand]
|
|
|
Booze
& Grub
Reviews of New York City's most popular (and least
popular) bars and restaurants. |
Hipster
Book Reviews This much ignorance
about literature can only lead to hurt feelings and a whole lot of
nonsense. |
Music
Check out the albums that have left Mr. H with permanent hearing loss in his left ear, but a song in his heart |
|