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Rated 2.99 stars
by 286 people


ReelTalk Movie Reviews
Secret Rescue Mission
by Frank Wilkins

Four years after they struck cinematic gold with the oddball indie hit Juno, Diablo Cody and Jason Reitman are at it again, but this time minus the slangy clangor and stylistic flourishes for which they were so unfairly derided in the film that made it fun to laugh at teen pregnancy. Ironically, this time around in Young Adult, they’ve arguably created a better film, but one that won’t be as celebrated.

The dynamic duo of indie filmmaking continues to dabble in the awkwardness of the high school years, but they replace the subject of unwed pregnancy with that of failure to launch following graduation and drag us along for the ride as a late twenty-something former prom queen, now psycho bitch, named Mavis (Charlize Theron) heads back to her small town of Mercury, Minnesota to reclaim what she thinks was rightfully hers: high school sweetheart Buddy Slade (Patrick Wilson).

Now a ghostwriter of a series of young adult novels that has run its course, a bitter alcoholic, and simply a miserable mess of a self-centered human being biding her time in a cluttered downtown Minneapolis apartment, Mavis doesn’t concern herself with the fact that Buddy is happily married. After all, why would he have sent her an e-mail announcing the birth of his baby if he didn’t want to reconnect, right? She sees it as a call to pack up her small dog, load the Mini Cooper and hit the road to rescue Buddy from his horrible fate that is certainly worse than death. Though her physical beauty is still intact, we soon realize there was never much inner poise or discriminate sophistication to begin with. Nor much common sense.

We’ve seen rom-com heroines make the vanity trek in many films before, proudly skittering back to their small town to prove to others how much they’ve moved up and on. But this is a Diablo Cody story. We know it’s never going to be predictable and it’s certain to leave us squirming in our seat with awkward interactions between characters with dark agendas and mixed intentions.

While waiting for her initial encounter with Buddy, who thinks she’s just passing by to say hello, Mavis is paid hardly a second glance by the locals, despite the slinky black formal number that would drop ‘em dead in any place other than a buffalo-wings beer joint in the middle of Minnesota. She does however, attract the attention of Matt Freehauf (Patton Oswalt), the high school outcast she only remembers as “hate-crime boy” because of the beating he took in high school.

Matt is a doughy, mama’s boy more comfortable tending his action-figure collection or garage-still whiskey operation than worrying himself with attraction to the opposite sex. But an unlikely bond forges between Matt and Mavis as his contemptuous world-view is perfectly matched with that of Mavis. He too is resentful and cynical, but he’s also actively trying to be positive about his life in his own dark way. Even though they are at opposite ends of the physicality spectrum, Mavis and Matt find common ground not in what they both like, but in their disdain and rejection of the exact same things. Theron and Oswalt display some form of quirky chemistry that makes us admire their unlikely connection. Over drinks Mavis shares her secret mission to save Buddy from his miserable existence.

Mavis’ deceitful quest to recapture her fleeting high school popularity becomes a maddening but enjoyable watch as Reitman unrolls the story at a slow-burn pace, titillating the audience with what it knows will eventually be a full-blown disaster. Still, when the climax arrives, it does indeed prove to be an unsettling watch, yet one not without its share of unexpected jaw-dropping surprises.

As unlikely as it all seems, the film works. Cody significantly reels in her jangly Juno-esque dialogue, so Young Adult isn’t quite as funny as Juno. But what it foregoes in humor gets replaced by a very realistic depiction at what a standard romantic comedy would look like in real life. Theron makes her Mavis a lost soul to root for. She’s the girl we love and hate in equal measure.

A pep talk delivered by Matt’s live-in sister (Collette Wolfe) turns out to be a resounding epiphany that strikes a perfect tone for both Mavis’s redemption as well as the film’s climax. Of many ways to end the film, the one chosen turns out to be not only the least expected, but also the most real and satisfying one we’ve ever seen from a Hollywood rom-com. Then again, this is Reitman and Juno. What did we expect?

(Released by Paramount Studios and rated “R” for language an some sexual content.)

Review also posted at www.franksreelreviews.com.


                                                                                                                                                                               
 
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