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Review: Lady Bird

12/12/2017

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​Sheer perfection. Writer-director Greta Gerwig’s (actress in Frances Ha and Mistress America) coming-of-age directorial debut is a marvelous gem, while actress Saoirse Ronan has never been better. Lady Bird delivers a fresh insight on the pains of adolescence. Oscar season is upon us.


​This is a must see movie of the holiday season; Lady Bird is full of heart as it reaches for the stars. Gerwig writes a poetic message on the growing pains of youth and finding yourself. If you think this is your traditional coming-of-age story, then think again because Lady Bird is an original, fresh and energetic take on the genre. On November 27, 2017, the film became the most-reviewed film ever to remain at a 100% in Rotten Tomatoes history with 164 positive reviews, beating the previous record holder Toy Story 2, which has 163 positive reviews. It stayed at a 100% until 195 registered reviews. Currently, sitting at a 99% out of 199 reviews, minus the one tainted review from critic Cole Smithey, Lady Bird proves that it is the perfect little movie with a big heart.

It screams watch me in every way, from the writing to the directing, Gerwig’s gem is a triumph. Plus, actress Ronan has never been better on screen. She blew me away with her performance and, in my opinion, I think she even topped her performance from 2015’s Brooklyn. Fingers crossed that she can earn herself a third Oscar nomination this season. Ronan’s organic form of the artistically-inclined seventeen-year-old will draw you into the story. Taking place in the early 2000s, we are introduced to Christine 'Lady Bird' McPherson (the knockout Ronan) and her turbulent relationship with her mother (the fantastic Laurie Metcalf). Christine refers to herself as ‘Lady Bird’ because this is the name she has chosen to give herself. “People go by the names their parents give them, but they don't believe in God.”

This shows us a passionate and rebellious side from the high school senior, who’s just trying to find her footing in life. Post 9/11 and set in Sacramento, California, we see a rapidly shifting American economic landscape placed in the overall background of this film. Lady Bird also attends a Catholic high school where she fights on maintaining her image in the wealthy Calvinist world. Lady Bird’s family is financially struggling and sits on the other side of the train tracks from the big houses. With her mother tirelessly working long hours as a nurse and her father hopelessly looking for a job, the family hits its ups and downs in the pathos. Lady Bird and her strong-willed mother are constantly butting heads throughout the film. Read this short piece of the script from a scene in the movie and you’ll see the brawling nature of this mother/daughter relationship.
 
Lady Bird: “…He barely saw that. I want to go where culture is, like New York.”
Marion (Metcalf): “How in the world did I raise such a SNOB?”
Lady Bird: “Or at least Connecticut or New Hampshire. Where writers live in the woods.”
Marion: “You couldn’t get into those schools anyway.”
Lady Bird: “MOM!”
Marion: “You can’t even pass your driver’s test.”
Lady Bird: “Because you wouldn’t let me practice enough!”
Marion: “The way you work, the way you don’t work, you’re not even worth state tuition, Christine.”
Lady Bird: “MY NAME IS LADY BIRD!”
Marion: “Well actually, it’s not, and it’s ridiculous. Your name is Christine.”
Lady Bird: “CALL ME LADY BIRD LIKE YOU SAID YOU WOULD!”
Marion: “You should just go to City College, with your work ethic. City College and then to jail then back to City College. Maybe you’d learn how to pull yourself up and not expect everyone to do everything for you...”
“They slow for a stop light and Lady Bird dramatically opens the door and rolls out of the car. Marion screams.”
 
Here, you can see Lady Bird’s struggle to prove to her mom that she's a real person who needs to be taken serious. On the flipside, we see a mother who is struggling at connecting with her only daughter and ends up coming down hard on her. Gerwig’s film is the perfect blend of messiness and communication. Throughout the film, we see Lady Bird grow in her relationships with friends, boyfriends and family. She confides in her best friend Julie (an outstanding Beanie Feldstein) about her need to escape her home town. She calls Sacramento "the Midwest of California.” For New York, she theorizes that college enrollment will be down in the big apple post 9/11.

​As for her crushes ... a closeted gay theater geek named Danny (Manchester By the Sea's Lucas Hedges, superb) and an easygoing musician named Kyle (the breakout star Timothée Chalamet in Call Me By Your Name, also from this year). Things don’t always go as planned for Lady Bird, such is life. Nevertheless, she stays strong, confident and in the end, finds her roots that makes her who she is in this messy world of ours. Overall, it’s one of the finest examples of well-crated filmmaking this year. Gerwig’s directorial debut earns all five stars from me, I was utterly impressed. The gravity of this film will send audiences everywhere cheering in their seats. In the simplest of terms, Lady Bird is flat-out amazing. 

Lady Bird is rated R (Restricted). For language, sexual content, brief graphic nudity and teen partying. ​
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    Ryan Arnold 

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    I love film and I love to write, so I thought, why not combine the two? I currently review new movies I see in theaters, on VOD, or streaming.

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