Saoirse Ronan Laurie Metcalf Odeya Rush Beanie Feldstein
Lucas Hedges Timothee Chalamet Tracy Letts
Lucas Hedges Timothee Chalamet Tracy Letts
There is always a challenge for comedies to
have substance as well as humor, and writer/director Greta Gerwig has achieved
just such a balance in Lady Bird. Comedy runs throughout, but underlying
it are observations about mother-daughter relationships, adolescence,
male-female relationships, friendships, truthfulness, religion, and economic
hardship, all presented naturalistically and with precise timing. The characters speak as real people
expressing themselves, as opposed to a series of comedy routines.
Young Christine (Ronan), who has adopted the
name of “Lady Bird”, is in the throes of first loves, struggling to make good
grades in high school so that she can go to a “good” college and get out of
Sacramento, and slogging through multiple applications to college. Interestingly, she has more faith in
herself than does anyone around her.
And true, she has committed some infractions and does not always have
the self-discipline she needs, but she is reasonably smart and knows what she
wants—to break out of living on the wrong side of the tracks and all that
implies. She is not unsympathetic
to her parents’ economic problems, it’s just that she is optimistic about being
able to do better.
Her mother Jenna (Rush) has no such high hopes;
she is a practical, organized woman who is appalled about things like a messy
room and disrespectful behavior, but is sorely lacking in emotional
responsiveness and psychological insight, although she does appear to be some
kind of counselor in her job. She
doesn’t have enough empathy to see how similar she and her daughter are. Fortunately for both mother and
daughter, the father (Letts) acts in a positive way as mediator. And fortunately for both, they always
manage to maintain some degree of understanding and love for each other.
Then there is Lady Bird’s life with her friends
at school, where there’s a bit of a caste system between those who live on
right and wrong sides of the track.
She and her very best friend (super bright but overweight and perhaps
not as creative as Christine) Julie (Feldstein), are tight and have great fun
together until Lady Bird begins to branch out and think she can be on the
“right side of the tracks” if she manipulates situations. She is attracted to a fellow Thespian,
Danny (Hedges), and when that doesn’t turn out, she goes for Kyle (Chalamet),
and it’s interesting to observe her exploring different ways of being in her
romantic relationships and in different social classes.
This well written story has a beginning,
middle, and very satisfying end.
The acting is superb, starting with Saoirse Ronan in a different role
from her usual that highlights her considerable talent. Odeya Rush and Trace Letts as
Christine’s parents are skilled actors whose strengths are readily evident in their very different
relationships with their daughter.
I found Beanie Feldstein’s performance as Christine’s best friend right
on, and I appreciated its truth about very bright, chubby girls not getting the
recognition from society that they deserve. The two young men, Lucas Hedges and Timothee Chalamet, who
play Christine’s boyfriends, live up to their promising reputations for
achieving their potential as actors.
In
addition to the quality of writing, directing, and acting, Jori Brion’s music
aptly evokes the period in which the movie takes place, the 1990’s (e.g., The
Monkees, The Doors), in expressing the mood of each scene.
An award-worthy production that marks
the accomplishment of its writer-director, Greta Gerwig.
Grade: A By
Donna R. Copeland
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