Lady
Bird **** ½ / *****
Directed
by: Greta
Gerwig.
Written
by: Greta
Gerwig.
Starring:
Saoirse
Ronan (Christine 'Lady Bird' McPherson), Laurie Metcalf (Marion McPherson), Tracy
Letts (Larry McPherson), Lucas Hedges (Danny O'Neill), Timothée Chalamet (Kyle
Scheible), Beanie Feldstein (Julie Steffans), Stephen McKinley Henderson (Father
Leviatch), Lois Smith (Sister Sarah Joan), Laura Marano (Diana Greenway),
Jordan Rodrigues (Miguel McPherson), John Karna (Greg Anrue), Odeya Rush (Jenna
Walton), Marielle Scott (Shelly Yuhan).
There is an art to making the
kind of coming-of-age teen comedy that Greta Gerwig gets exactly right in her
directorial debut – Lady Bird. In theory, Lady Bird could just another “Sundance”
like movie – we see seemingly a dozen like it a year – about seemingly messed
up, yet ultimately rather conventional suburban families, and the frustrating
push-and-pull people parents and their children as well as high school crushes,
losing your virginity, and wanting nothing more than to get out of your home –
and home town – and then immediately missing them when you do. Lady Bird should
be another of those movies (not unlike say Patti Cake$ - which I caught up this
weekend as well) – that I either mildly enjoy as they cycle through the
clichés, or else just absolutely drive me nuts. Those have become as formulaic
as the Hollywood movies they are supposed to act as counter programming to. But
Gerwig has always had a talent of taking something that would normally make me
role my eyes, and instead making something honest and genuine out of it. The
first film she co-wrote – and starred in – was Noah Baumbach’s Frances Ha –
which I almost dreaded seeing because I thought it was going to be more twee, millennial
naval gazing – and yet that film moved me, made me laugh, and had genuine
insight. Lady Bird is much the same way – you’ve seen this movie before, sure,
but never quite like this – it is grounded in the real and the specific in a
way that makes it feel new and different.
Part of that is because of the
lead performance by the great Saoirse Ronan – who is only 23, and already has
two Oscar nomination (she should have won for Brooklyn) – and should get a
third here. This performance is nothing like her work in breakout Atonement,
which itself was nothing like her work in Brooklyn – and her impressive resume
already shows amazing range. Here, she’s playing Christine – a high school
senior who has decided she wants everyone to call her Lady Bird, and wants
nothing else but to get out of Sacramento (the “Midwest of California” as she
calls it) – and head to the East Coast “where culture is”. Lady Bird is smart –
but not necessarily in the way that shows up in grades, and everyone wants her
to be more “realistic” about her college aspirations. Her mother, Marion
(Laurie Metclaf – finally getting a movie role that lets her show what many of
us have known for years – that she is a terrific actress) is hard on Lady Bird
– in part because they are too similar, both too hard headed to be willing to
admit when the other may be right. The two are at each other’s throats a lot –
which means easy going dad Larry (Tracy Letts – continuing to show he’s one of
the best character actors around in addition to be one of the best playwrights)
to play peacemaker – although he has his own issues as well.
Throughout her senior year, Lady
Bird will do what a lot of teenagers do – she’ll fall in “love” with two boys
at her Catholic school – the first is Danny (Lucas Hedges) – from one of those
good Irish Catholic families with a lot of kids, but he’s hiding a secret, and
the second is Kyle (Timothée Chalamet), the kind of pretentious ass, who smokes
cigarettes, read books, and says things like “I’m trying to avoid being a part
of the economy” – that teenagers can think sound deep. Her best friend is Julie
(Beanie Feldstein), and the two of them share a bond that only teenage girls
do.
Lady Bird is perhaps a tad too
episodic – there isn’t much a plot here, other than Lady Bird finds her way
through senior year. Not every episode works – but most of them do, and in
total, they add up to something quietly moving. Gerwig, as a screenwriter,
knows when to give you that big emotional moment, and when to pull back. It’s
also well-directed throughout – unshowy, but finding the right moments. Gerwig
had already shown immense talent as an actress – and her two screenplay with
Baumbach (Frances Ha and Mistress America) – was a nice blending of their
styles. Here though, she finds her voice solo – and it’s remarkable to see.
This is one of the year’s most endearing, funny and entertaining films – and in
a year this dark, that makes it vital and necessary as well.
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