52 Films by Women Vol 2. 7. THE EDGE OF SEVENTEEN (Director: Kelly Fremon Craig)
The Edge of Seventeen
is a painful reminder that when you are a teenager, you are very far from the
best version of yourself.
You are governed by insecurities, lash out for a ripple of
attention, over-dramatise, I say again, OVER dramatise, and believe
wholeheartedly that the impact you have on others is as nothing to the impact
others have on you.
Oh, and you cannot communicate. Everything turns out wrong.
Words congeal, get ahead of themselves, barely hint at subtlety and nuance.
Being a teenager is embarrassing – unless, that is, you have
some genetic advantage, some shortcut to popularity.
This is to say that The
Edge of Seventeen, pitched midway between a studio (Hollywood
sentimentality) and an independent feature (gritty, with an unlikable
protagonist) is probably the most vivid and wince-worthy depiction of teen
girlhood since Welcome to the Dollhouse.
The difference between writer-director Kelly Fremon Craig’s film and Todd
Solondz’s calling card debut is that Fremon Craig isn’t a man projecting his
insecurities onto a girl. Fremon Craig is holding up a mirror.
Hailee Steinfeld (True
Grit, Ender’s Game) gives an
all-out courageous performance in a film in which her character, Nadine, is absolutely,
positively not redeemed by a boy who finally notices her. The boy whom she
attracts, Korean-American, Erwin Kim (Canadian actor Hayden Szeto) is just as
awkward as she is. When they sit next to each other in class, he compliments
her on her jacket – all exploratory conversations begin with a compliment.
‘Where did you get it?’ he asks. Nadine
is tongue-tied, barely answers. Erwin has to re-group to keep the conversation
going. This, people, is what being a teen is like. Heck, I’m still like that in
my fifties.
I’m getting ahead of myself. The film begins with Nadine
announcing to her High School History teacher, Mr Bruner (Woody Harrelson) that
she’s going to kill herself. How Mr Bruner responds tells you a lot about the
rapport built up between student and teacher. Mr Bruner responds by saying that
he too has just finished his suicide note written as a result of interacting
with plainly dressed teens. So he’s not taking her seriously. He’s not mocking
her either, rather inviting her to take down the hysteria a notch. Now a
teacher and a student should not have the rapport that Mr Bruner and Nadine
have; it’s too familiar. If someone overheard their conversation, Mr Bruner’s
‘indifference’ would get him into a lot of trouble. Fortunately, there aren’t
any other teachers in the movie so Mr Bruner’s deadpan sarcasm doesn’t lead to
his dismissal. Nadine has an excuse. She doesn’t have a dad. Mr Bruner is the
nearest she has to an adult role model who might dispense non-judgmental
kindness and support, just like her own pop.
What happened to him? Well, as a kid, when she is dropped
off at school with her popular older brother, Darian – he doesn’t look older in
the flashbacks hunched over a portable video game console (could be a Nintendo)
– Dad (Eric Keenleyside) has to get her out of the car. She has no friends,
until she meets young Krista (Ava Grace Cooper) who shows her a creepy crawly
caterpillar, probably the blackest, furriest caterpillar I have ever seen on
screen. Krista allows young Nadine (Lina Renna) to be her caterpillar’s second
mom, until she accidentally suffocates it in a pencil case two hours later and
it has to be flushed down the toilet. The two become great friends. Krista’s upbringing
has its own turbulence. The two of them have, as one might say, each other’s
backs.
What happened to Dad? Taking Nadine out for a cheese burger
and giving his only daughter a motivating talk, Dad suffers from a heart attack
and dies. Nadine has a certain amount of guilt (at least we think she does) for
being the last person with him. I can tell you, I’ve had a heart attack in
front of my child and it’s no fun; fortunately mine was at a North London bus
station and help was available. I can tell you that one good thing about being
dead for thirteen minutes is that it builds character.
So Nadine has been scarred for life and she must know that
suicide is a luxury not afforded to the cardiac-impaired. She deserves Mr
Bruner’s rebuff. She has a major crush on a boy, Nick Mossman (Alexander
Calvert) who works at Petland. A crush in Act One leads to a pass in Act Two.
Oh boy.
However Darian, described as a ‘born winner’ by his sister,
looked as a boy, he has grown into a perfect teethed teen heart throb and is
played by Blake Jenner (star of TV’s ‘Melissa and Joey’ and ‘Glee’). Darian has
it easy – or so Nadine thinks. When Mom (Kyra Sedgwick) goes away for the
weekend to spend time with her dentist boyfriend, Nadine invites Krista (Haley
Lu Richardson) over for an ‘all the soda – and a teensy bit of alcohol – you
can drink evening. But then Darian shows up, with his friends and they are
having fun in the pool. ‘Get them out of here,’ implores Nadine. They leave
eventually. Nadine passes out in the bathroom – Krista drapes a towel over her.
She helps Darian with the cleaning and then – wow – Krista and Darian end up in
bed together. This puts a huge wedge between her and Nadine. ‘Don’t sleep with
my friends!’ she screams at Darian. ‘Friends?’ Darian snaps back. Nadine has
but the one. Ouch.
‘The Edge of Seventeen’ explores how Nadine responds to this
second loss. She is the awkward third wheel at a party. A girl compares Nadine
and Darian to Danny de Vito and Arnold Schwarzenegger in Twins. Triple ouch. Nadine asks her mother to pick her up; she is
beyond humiliated and gives Krista an ultimatum: ‘him or me.’ Krista chooses
Darian because, well, this choice shouldn’t have to be made.
It would give me enormous pleasure to relate the plot to you
just to spell out how good The Edge of
Seventeen is. I won’t, though. It is sharply written and is a
roller-coaster, very far from what passes for teen entertainment in modern
Hollywood. Ten years ago this might have starred Hilary Duff or Lindsay Lohan,
but down the path of false teenage advertising madness lies. Fremon Craig has
done Hollywood – she wrote the 2009 teen pic, Post Grad starring Alexis Biedel and Michael Keaton. Here, she has
produced something terrific, dare I say it, a modern classic.
Steinfeld never turns on the screen charm to win you over.
She is playing a normal girl, not the prettiest in her class, nor the plainest
either, but one with confused feelings about everything. When Nadine steals her
mother’s car (at one point) you really hate her for being so selfish. Yet there
is a scene by a waste facility – Fremon Craig chooses her locations
appropriately – where you experience just the right amount of sympathy for her.
The Edge of Seventeen
is Fremon Craig’s directorial debut. Her film has earned a Golden Globe
nomination for Steinfeld and deserves screenplay recognition. It is certainly a
late addition to my films of the year and worth one hour and forty-four minutes
of your time. One word sums it up: relatable!
Reviewed at Cineworld Leicester Square (formerly Empire) Screen Six, 14:40 screening, Wednesday 28 December 2016
Originally published on Bitlanders.com
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