Yes, the title character attends Catholic school, but the religious aspects are merely background to the more human tale. |
An excellent, if somewhat overhyped, movie telling of an aimlessly rebellious high school senior and her rocky relationship with her mother.
Lady Bird is the adopted nickname of Christine McPherson (Saoirse Ronan), a young woman living through her senior year in high school in Sacramento, California, in 2002. Though fairly smart in her way, she has a rebellious streak common to most teenagers. This leads her into and through familiar trials of the age, including the poor decisions and overdramatization of relatively minor occurrences. It also regularly puts her at odds with her mother, Marion (Laurie Metcalf). Marion does love her daughter, though it is often buried under passive aggressive (sometimes outright aggressive) jabs at her daughters lack of greater ambitions beyond wanting to leave Sacramento. The story follows Lady Bird all the way through her senior year and the immediate months after, including the ups and down which, though relatively minor in the grand scheme, can seem to mean everything in the world to a seventeen-year-old.
This is a really solid movie, and could be seen as shorter, female-focused counterpart to Richard Linklater's award-winning Boyhood. However, instead of covering seminal moments along a 12-year span of a young person' life, Lady Bird keeps things tighter and hence more intimate. Virtually everything in the film feels highly authentic, probably since it is heavily autobiographical for writer/director Greta Gerwig. The shared moments of joy and anger between Lady Bird, her friends, perceived enemies, and family (categories which often overlap) should seem very familiar to many viewers. Many of the scenes capture the humor and gravity of key moments at that period of one's life, and nearly every moment enlightens us as to the characters' traits.
The acting is outstanding, with established talents like Saoirse Ronana following up her award-winning 2015 performance in Brooklyn with another great turn as the angsty title character. It probably helps that, at only age 23, Ronan is not terribly far removed from her own teenage years, and her ability to channel that attitude enhances her turn as Lady Bird. The other primary character, her mother, is equally brilliant, thanks to theater veteran Laurie Metcalf (best known as Rosanne's sister Jackie on Rosanne). The dynamic between the two is at the core of this movie, and it plays out exceptionally well. It also bears mentioning that every supporting actor hits their roles perfectly, with only one very minor role feeling a bit oversold.
Lady Bird and Danny, her boyfriend for a time. Danny's rather conservative, well-to-do family highlights certain feelings of inferiority that Lady Bird struggles with. |
All of this said, and as strong a film as Lady Bird is, I must state that I did not feel that it lived up to the massive amount of hype that it received from the collective of critics. On Rotten Tomatoes aggregate site, the movie garnered 220/221 "positive reviews," and an average rating of 8.8/10. That latter number is stunning, as it places it above or among the greatest films ever. While the movie is very good, and one that I would recommend nearly everyone see, I would never suggest that it is one of the best movies I've ever seen in my life. I simply offer this as a caveat, in case you expect some sort of life-changing work of mind-blowing artistry. Don't. It's a very well-done film made by artists who knew exactly how to tell the relatively simple, subtle story before them.
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