Patti
Cake$ *** / *****
Directed
by: Geremy
Jasper.
Written
by: Geremy
Jasper.
Starring:
Danielle
Macdonald (Patti), Bridget Everett (Barb), Siddharth Dhananjay (Jheri), Mamoudou
Athie (Basterd), Cathy Moriarty (Nana), McCaul Lombardi (Danny), Patrick Brana (Slaz),
MC Lyte (DJ French Tips), Sahr Ngaujah (O-Z).
No one can really claim that
Patti Cake$ is in anyway an original movie. It is basically Eight Mile with a
heavyset white women in the lead – and remember, Eight Mile was essentially
Purple Rain, with Eminem stepping in for Prince. And Purple Rain wasn’t that
original either. You know the beats this story is going to hit from the moment
it begins – and it hits them all – and hard. Yet, despite my better judgement,
the movie mainly won me over. The performances are winning and touching, and
the music is genuinely catchy. No, the film didn’t become the audience favorite
so many thought it was going to be out of Sundance – but you’d have to be
pretty cynical to hate it.
The film takes place in the
downtrodden wasteland of suburban New Jersey. It’s there where Patti (Danielle
Macdonald) lives with her mother, Barb (Bridget Everett) and chain smoking Nana
(Cathy Moriaty). The family is poor – Barb is a hair dresser, not making very
much, Patti – who’s now 23 bartends, at a low rent dive. Patti can never be
sure if Barb has a new man in her life or not – Barb drinks a lot, and battles
depression – and when she wants to, her rage can be turned on Patti.
Patti alongside her friend Jheri
(Siddharth Dhananjay) – who works in a pharmacy – have what is likely an
unrealistic dream of becoming rappers. It’s a dream Barb does not encourage –
she had dreams of her own music career, and they didn’t go far. Patti and Jheri
have to deal with the assholes who don’t think they’ll be able to do it, not
because of their talent (they don’t see them perform) – but because of who they
are, an overweight white girl and her Indian friend. It doesn’t help that Patti
has stage fright, and backs down quickly when they do get their chance.
Eventually these two misfits will meet a third one – Basterd (Mamodou Athie) –
who lives in a shack by the cemetery, and is some sort of metal/rap musical
genius.
You know where this is headed,
right? If you don’t, congratulations on watching your first movie ever. For the
first half hour or so of the movie, I resisted, because everything seemed to be
running on a track – everything was too by-the-numbers, and easy. But
gradually, the movie does wear you down. A lot of that has to do with
Macdonald, who brings genuine emotion to her role as Patti – you don’t often
see women like her in the lead roles of movies, and she knows it. She lacks
confidence, but is a genuine hard working and nice person – and when we do hear
her rap, she is legitimately great as well. The rest of the cast is a mixed bag
– I don’t know that Jheri ever really becomes a complete character, and Basterd
certainly doesn’t. Bridget Everett, the bold, brash stand-up comedian really
does bring it as Patti’s mom as well – she surprised me, in a good way.
The film is directorial debut of
Geremy Jasper – who also wrote the music for the film. As a first effort, it’s
pretty good – he certainly isn’t swinging for the fences, but then that’s a
mistake too many inexperienced directors make – trying to do too much, and end
up doing it all poorly. Patti Cake$ lacks ambition – but it does what it sets
out to do.
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