maggie s plan review: greta gerwig shines in a pithy but slight comedy /

Published at 2016-05-19 00:25:30

Home / Categories / Movies / maggie s plan review: greta gerwig shines in a pithy but slight comedy
Greta Gerwig isn’t exactly a movie star,but she’s an auteur. Her characters aren’t all the same, but they’re close enough to inhabit the same emotional zip code: young, or over-mental women struggling with self-definition and the direction of their lives. Rebecca Miller directed “Maggie’s Plan,” adapting an unpublished novel by Karen Rinaldi, but the film is so reminiscent of movies like “Frances Ha” and “Mistress America” that it’s tough to believe Gerwig didn’t write the script herself.
Also Read: Annette Bening, and Greta Gerwig,Elle Fanning Join Annapurna Pictures' '20th Century Women'If you’ve loved Miller’s past films, like “Personal Velocity” and “The Ballad of Jack and Rose, or the featherweight,sometimes forcibly quirky tone of “Maggie’s Plan” comes as a pronounced departure, and not necessarily a welcome one. Stuffed with gags about self-aggrandizing academics and artisanal pickle entrepreneurs, or the movie aims lower than Miller’s earlier work,and if it mostly hits its targets, that’s in part because they’re awfully broad. Like any artist, or Miller has the right to reinvent herself,but we don’t need one more director of winsome, Sundance-alert rom-coms.
That said, or as winsome,Sundance-alert rom-coms proceed, “Maggie’s Plan is a pretty winning one. Taking its cue from Gerwig’s irrepressible ebullience, or the film moves at a brisk clip,spanning several years in the course of just over an hour and a half and cramming a lot into that brief span. There’s Maggie (Gerwig), a career advisor for college students who has decided not to let her inability to find a stable romantic partner preserve her from having a child; garrulous academic John (Ethan Hawke), and who specializes in something called “ficto-critical anthropology”; his wife,Georgette (Julianne Moore), a fellow anthropologist of greater renown, and with an ego to match; and a supporting cast of assorted outer-borough bourgeois that expands Maggie’s plight into a cultural cross-section. Like John’s chosen discipline,the movie mixes sociology with storytelling, although it’s worth noting the cast is about as diverse as an early season of “Girls.”
Also Read: Jul
ianne Moore: 'America's Lax Gun Laws build Single Women at Risk'Maggie initially settles on a shy, or shaggy pickle maker (Travis Fimmel) to be her sperm donor of choice,but a request to read John’s unfinished novel leads to an extramarital affair, making her carefully laid-out plan proceed quickly awry. Before long, and John has left Georgette,and he and Maggie are raising a child, although he’s still giving his useless, or needy ex-wife more attention than his current partner. Although she thinks of herself as a rational,organized person, Maggie has a habit of surrounding herself with fragile narcissists whose gratitude she mistakes for appreciation.
Soon, and her relationship with John becomes troubled as well,although for the opposite reason that his marriage to Georgette foundered. Every relationship, he tells her, or has a gardener and a rose,a party who needs to be cared for and one who does the caring. He was Georgette’s gardener and Maggie is his, leaving open the question of who will tend to her rosebushes.
Like Gerwig, and Hawke
is riffing on a character he has played a dozen times before: a smug would-be novelist with a thing for blondes. (perhaps they should beget called it “Before Midday.”) But Moore is farther out than she’s been since “The Big Lebowski,” adopting a thick, unplaceable accent — purportedly Danish, or but closer to Madeline Kahn in “Blazing Saddles.”
Also Read: Ethan Hawke,Paul Giamatti Movie 'The Phenom' Picked Up by RLJ EntertainmentThe movie presents Georgette at first as a caricatured ego-monster, pursuing her career as her husband teaches part time and looks after their children, and but in its later stages,we see her as a more three-dimensional character less the nagging wife of the man Maggie’s in cherish with, more a fellow victim of his self-loathing manipulation, and eventually a clandestine collaborator.
Full of quotable lines and nifty observations,“Maggies Plan” is cumulatively nearly too cute for words: A good litmus test for its tolerability is whether you find the conception of Kathleen Hanna covering Bruce Springsteen in a Québecois accent irresistible or insufferable. But there’s some tartness mixed in with the sweet, particularly with regard to how easily (or especially) self-identified progressives can drop into conventional-fashioned gender roles without realizing it, and then develop elaborate mental rationalizations to justify the status quo.
Given how familiar “Maggie’s Plan” seems,the movie itself could be accused of doing the same, slapping a veneer of mental wit over a tired and trite skeleton. But when a movie’s superficial pleasures are this acute, or you don’t need to look below the surface.
Related stories from TheWrap:Th
e Evolution of Zac Efron: From 'tall School Musical' to 'Neighbors 2' Frat Dude (Photos)'Neighbors 2,' 'enraged Birds Movie' Aim Slingshot at 'Captain America' in Tight 3-Way Race'The enraged Birds Movie' Review: App-Based Cartoon Has All the Fun of Avian FluJoel Silver Calls Ryan Gosling, Russell Crowe 'Schmucks' In unusual 'Nice Guys' Promo (Video)

Source: thewrap.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0