JANE WANTS A BOYFRIEND – Review

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Just from glancing at this film’s title you might think that you’re in for another frothy “rom-com”, or perhaps a peppy teen comedy that ends with a “make-over’ montage prior to a jubilant dance number at the senior prom. Well, you’d be mistaken, maybe pleasantly mistaken. Though one name is mentioned in its title, this sweet little “indie” flick really concerns that lady and her older sister, Bianca, who’s found her fella’. She’s the one playing “cupid”, a challenge since her sis’ must deal with many, many challenges. This tale is a search for romance, but also a love story of these young women, a relationship that is tested when JANE WANTS A BOYFRIEND.

As the film begins, Bianca (Eliza Dushku) is in the last days of rehearsal as the fairy queen Titania in a big new stage production of Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, a job that will finally make the young woman a full-time actress. She’s also gotten a job in wardrobe for her timid, but creative younger sister Jane (Louisa Krause), who is on the autism spectrum with Asperger’s syndrome. Bianca is also throwing a house-warming party in a couple of days at the apartment that she now shares with her longtime beau Rob (Amir Arison), a staff reporter at a newspaper. But first, there’s the birthday breakfast for Jane where their parents (Polly Draper and Gregg Edelman) drop a bombshell. They’re selling the family house in Manhattan and moving to Jersey. Plus they think that Jane should move in with Bianca and Rob (don’t want to disrupt Jane’s routine). As if that’s not enough for Bianca, she’s working her final bartending shift that night at the Fish Bar. Luckily she gets a visit there from Rob’s buddy Jack (Gabriel Ebert), a rakish, unanchored sous chef. While Bianca is in the back of the bar, Jane drops in to deliver a batch of her homemade cookies. Jack attempts to engage her in conversation, but the shy Jane departs quickly, before Bianca returns. The next night Jack spots Jane at the housewarming. The two talk and connect up on the rooftop patio, until Bianca breaks them up, warning Jack to back off! He hurriedly leaves as Jane confesses to her sis’ that she wants a boyfriend. Bianca enlists the help of her best pal Cynthia (Anisha Nagarajan) to find a suitor with the same challenges as Jane. But despite Rob and Bianca’s warnings, Jack will not be deterred. Somehow he will meet up with Jane once more. But can they re-connect despite all the obstacles thrown in their way?

Krause portrays the title character with great sympathy and depth, never resorting to “actorly” tricks and tics to convey Jane’s condition. There’s a spontaneity in her performance adding to the unpredictable nature of the character. We can see the wonder in her eyes and body language as she strains to break free of her shell and experience adulthood and romance. She’s a great acting partner to screen vet Dushku in the less “showy”, but very pivotal role of Bianca, not only a sister, but for much of the story, a parent. For most of her career, she has been the exotic dangerous femme fatale, particularly as the iconic Faith on TV’s “Buffy the Vampire Slayer, but here Dukshu shows us a softer side, the nurturing, supportive sibling. But Bianca’s no simpering saint as we see when she snarls at Jack in that memorable party scene (“mama Grizzly”!). And there’s the frustration as she tries to help, but is accused of “smothering” (a “helicopter sister”?). It’s confident, compelling work from the charismatic screen talent.

But let’s not neglect the men in the sisters’ lives. In his first scenes Ebert’s Jack is the strutting boastful “playa” around Bianca. After meeting Jane, we can see in his face that a switch as been activated, that Jack has to change. This may be best conveyed in a terrific monologue that he delivers about wanting to master soups. Ebert’s delivery makes it clear that Jack’s not really talking about that food staple. He has a couple of great scenes with the talented Arison, especially when Jack pressures Rob to give up Jane’s phone number. Amir shows us how this principled man is torn over this, and over telling Bianca about a new work opportunity. Nagarajan makes the most out of the best pal role and becomes the steadying influence and sounding board that Bianca desperately needs. Draper and Edelman are charming as the parents who need to have their own time together, to rekindle their own fire, while remaining a part of their girls’ lives. The character closest to a “villain” may be Nick Stevenson as the arrogant, intimidating stage director Harrison West, who explodes in tantrums during rehearsals. But in an interesting twist, his tirades are just the motivator needed by Bianca. The very talented ensemble sends the story soaring.

Much of their praise should be aimed at the person who guided them, director William Sullivan in only his third feature film. He knows just when to linger on a reaction or to cut away and give the action some distance and space. The scenes are framed perfectly, especially around the theatre where the story begins and ends. Ons shot of Bianca waiting off to the side of the stage, listening for her cue resembles a living oil painting (helped by cinematographer Brandon Roots). All the talents involved were, no doubt, inspired by the sensitive, inspiring screenplay by Jarret Kerr, who does double duty as Bottom to Bianca’s Titania. There’s no heavy-handed preaching here, no “after school special” vibe. The dialogue flows naturally, even as certain sequences are emotionally raw (a confrontation between Bianca and Jane after a date disaster is a dramatic doozy). The NYC locales are great backdrops to the action, but never intrude on the story’s intimacy, one that will touch many families. There’s lots of love and sweet sibling support in this warm-hearted quest as one sister learns to let go because JANE WANTS A BOYFRIEND.

4 Out of 5

Janeposter

OBVIOUS CHILD – The Review

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Let’s take a detour, a very hard left turn to be more precise, from the noisy Summer block busters and head to the independent side streets of cinema. And, as is usually the case, the side street is in New York City. This is another quirky comedy about an off-kilter, free-spirit trying to make a life for herself while rebelling against adulthood as her 20’s come to a close, the same territory treaded by PARTY GIRL and FRANCES HA. Oh, and perhaps she can hook up with a good guy along the way. The heroine of this new film faces a complication that sets her journey on a different path than many of those previous “indie” movie icons. That’s because some very tough, very adult decisions are in store for this OBVIOUS CHILD.

Our introduction to Donna Stern (Jenny Slate) takes place as she regales a small audience with her witty observations and anecdotes at a small comedy club. Her euphoria from all the laughter is erased backstage, in the co-ed bathroom, as her boyfriend breaks up with her (he’s hooked up with one of her pals!). The streak of bad luck continues as her bookstore boss informs her that he’s closing the place in a few weeks (I wonder if it’s near the bookstore that Woody Allen shuts down in FADING GIGILO?). Donna gets great support from her roommate Nellie (Gaby Hoffmann), stand-up pal Joey (Gabe Liedman), and her comedy writer/puppeteer pop, Jacob (Richard Kind). Her college professor mother Nancy (Polly Draper), on the other hand, thinks that Donna should have a life plan and has printed up some spread sheets to help jump-start her job quest! Donna’s frustration build until she uses her comedy gig to vent, laying a big egg at the club. As she proceeds to drown her sorrows post-show with Joey, she meets hunky, somewhat straight-laced Max (Jake Lacy) at the bar. The booze helps float Donna back to Max’s place that night and (to quote the TV show “Seinfeld”, “Yada, yada, yada…”), that next morning a groggy Donna heads back home. The two lose track of each other over the next few weeks, when she’s hit with some physical maladies. A drug store test kit confirms her suspicions: she’s pregnant. A nurse at the local clinic sets an appointment for the termination procedure on February 14. Really, an abortion on Valentine’s Day? As the days click away, Donna wonders what else will life have in store for her in advance of the big day.

So, in the last couple of sentences I dropped the big ‘A-bomb”. Perhaps I should have issued the big spoiler alert, but since it’s emblazoned on several ads via a critic quote I think it should be brought up in the discussion. The procedure isn’t dismissed away with a couple of lines of dialogue as in films like PARENTHOOD or the source of a desperate action sequence, going back fifty years or so to Hollywood flicks like BLUE DENIM and LOVE WITH A PROPER STRANGER, where the back-alley abortionists were slapped down. In OBVIOUS, the alternatives aren’t really discussed either, but a lengthy debate wouldn’t work using this main character. The closest scenes to that are experiences related by Donna’s friends that evoke melancholy and even tears. Kudos must go to the screenplay by director Gillain Robespierre working from a story by Karen Maine, Elisabeth Holm, and Anna Bean which was expanded from  a 2009 short film. But this is not a hot-button “message” film, it can be exhaustingly funny as when Donna hangs out across the street from his ex’s place, hoping to spy him and her former friend (“Just two more minutes, then I’ll leave”). As the poster quote states, it is a “rom-com”, but the controversial subject will put off many fans of those usual studio-made bits of fluff. More kudos to director Robespierre for treating the audience as adults by not attempting to “play it safe”. She also displays a great knack for comic timing and giving sequences a taut rhythm and flow.

Oh, and she’s assembled a superb cast anchored by a big, brassy breakout performance by Slate, who’s best known for her television work. Most recently she stole scenes as the gold-digging Mona-Lisa Saperstein on “Parks and Recreation”, but her first be claim to fame was on her first episode as part of the cast of TV’s “Saturday Night Live” in 2009 when she accidentally dropped the dreaded “F-bomb” (she was not asked to return for a second year). Her stand-up persona in the film recalls the raunch of Amy Schumer and Chealsea Handler along with the ethnic gags (and more raunchiness) of Sarah Silverman. Her fearlessness fades away from the mike to reveal an endearing vulnerability. We’re immediately in her corner hoping she’ll get past the big break-up, even as she leaves countless drunken messages on her ex-beau’s voicemail. Later, as she lets loose with Max, Slate shows a wild, sexy side as they careen about his apartment to a pounding beat blasting from the stereo. More leading roles for this lady, please! But wait, there’s other actors in the film and Ms.Slate works very well with them, most prominately is her leading man Mr. Lacy as the somewhat button-down Max. Happily his relationship with Donna gets him to loosen up considerably and Lacy is able to use the comic skills he devolped in the last couple of seasons on TV’s “The Office” as the besieged Pete. Liedman takes the often clichéd role of the gay best pal of the heroine role and gives it a fresh spin. Also terrific in the supportive buddy role is Hoffman, in a twist from many films, is “the roommate from Heaven (yes, not that other place)”. It’s a great companion piece to her “Earth mother” role in last year’s CRYSTAL FAIRY. Kind and Draper are welcome additions to the cast as the different parents (a flashback to their courtship would make for an engaging film), as is David Cross as an on-the-make comedian acquaintance.

Splendid work from all involved, so if you can handle the tough subject matter and some very coarse language than this film may be the Summer respite from the sequels and reboots that you’ve been hoping to see. OBVIOUS CHILD eschews the easy juvenile gross-out gags, to be one of the year’s best, truly adult comedies.

4 Out of 5

OBVIOUS CHILD opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas

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