52 Films by Women Vol 6. 46. SHARP STICK (Director: Lena Dunham)
Sharp Stick is sure to divide opinion. There
will be those that hate it and those that hate it a lot. Those that hate it a
lot will object to writer-director Lena Dunham’s portrayal of an autistic
protagonist. Not that the ‘A’ word is ever mentioned but Sarah Jo (Kristine
Froseth) presents with the tropes of high-functioning autism: conditioned to be
helpful and follow instructions but insensitive to others without being
narcissistic.
Dunham, best known for the hit HBO television series Girls
in which she also starred, hasn’t made a film since for 2010 debut, Tiny
Furniture. She has absolutely earned the right to try something
challenging. Since debuting Sharp Stick at the 2022 Sundance Film
Festival, she has already completed her third film, Catherine, Called
Birdy, which airs on Amazon Prime in the autumn. Critics can suck it.
Set in the fringes of Hollywood, Sharp Stick depicts
Sarah Jo’s sexual awakening, seemingly motivated by conversations she has with
her biological mother, Marilyn (Jennifer Jason Leigh) and adopted sister,
Treina (Taylour Paige). Dunham’s protagonist had a radical hysterectomy as a
teenager and is unable to have children. Dunham is similarly unable to bear
children. Though the circumstances differ, Dunham’s film unquestionably comes
from an honest place.
Sarah Jo, who wears a wristband that bears her name so she
couldn’t pretend to be anyone else, works as a caregiver to a couple, Heather
(Dunham) and Josh (Jon Bernthal) who have a son, Zach (Liam Michel Saux) with
Down Syndrome. She is basically Zach’s asexual best friend and study buddy,
colouring in pictures alongside him. The difference is that Sarah Jo can switch
out and offer to help the household when Zach is otherwise engaged, but for the
most part she’s not attuned to adult behaviour.
Dunham contextualises this. Sarah Jo’s adopted sister Treina
exists in a world of play, posting images and videos of herself on Instagram
and TikTok in the hope of being a social media influencer – Sarah Jo helps with
the filming. Treina is providing a service to an unseen customer base,
essentially existing in her own bubble. Except that Marilyn hounds her about
income: is she making money or not? Treina is also pregnant from a boy who has
long since left the picture, in fact was never in it.
We are to assume that Sarah Jo had schooling that kept her
away from the real world and has come to accept a world of play as reality. Her
interest in sex in piqued. Not because there’s a man in Marilyn’s life – none
of her lovers stuck around. Rather because she’d heard about it.
Sarah Jo’s one interaction with socio-economic reality is to
collect rent payments for the man upstairs, who refuses to pay. In the
friendliest manner she can muster, she issues a pre-eviction notice. The errant
tenant snatches it from her and responds with curse words. Sarah Jo wears a
face mask, reducing any transmission of Covid 19. Sharp Stick is
a rarity in modern cinema in acknowledging the reality of living with Covid.
Dunham’s film is a far cry from the problematised,
moralistic films made by men about women’s pursuit of sexual pleasure, such as Looking
for Mr. Goodbar. Dunham withholds judgment as she presents Sarah Jo’s
exploration as humorous. However, our response is to perceive Sarah Jo as
vulnerable and open to abuse, however much Dunham shows her in control of the
choices that she makes.
The first of these is to launch herself at Josh, who after
initially resisting, has sex with her. It is later revealed that he has been
serially unfaithful to Heather. Sarah Jo can’t just stop at one sexual
encounter. She continues to make herself available to Josh. For his part, he
partakes.
Josh knows Yuli (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) a guy in the music
industry and later Sarah Jo will seek him out. Her relationship with Josh
escapes Heather’s notice. Offering to help more, Heather criticises Sarah Jo
for not clearing materials away, not acknowledging that Sarah Jo may not
understand her sternly sarcastic tone; Dunham certainly hasn’t written a
sympathetic part for herself.
There are two moments of drama. First when the heavily
pregnant Heather slips on her own water as it breaks; she slides down in her
kitchen. Sarah Jo telephone Josh but Heather notices Sarah Jo’s necklace is
similar to one she has seen before and realises that it is a gift from Josh.
Josh returns, but Heather tells him that she wants to go to hospital in an
ambulance, not in his car. Heather confronts Josh over having sex with Sarah
Jo. She wants Sarah Jo to leave and for Zach to be looked after by someone else.
Sarah Jo eventually departs.
The second occurs when Treina loses her child. A party is
held – a nearly-baby shower. A male guest brings a toy for the child, that is
exactly the wrong thing, misunderstanding what one should bring to a
nearly-baby shower. The purpose of the event is to acknowledge the unborn
baby’s fleeting existence, to put it behind Treina.
After an initial period of hiding away – her placement
officer, Mercedes (Janicza Bravo) leaves her a pizza and details of another
child with special needs who could use her care – Sarah Jo sets out to tick
sexual experiences off a list. Dunham’s worst idea is to have Sarah Jo deliver
a blow job by literally blowing on (off-screen) male genitals. She advertises
sexual favours online. Men can visit her, and she will perform one of the acts
on her list. She also obsesses over male porn star, Vance Leroy (Scott
Speedman), having been told that everyone should have their own favourite porn
star. Incidentally, Dunham depicts pornography in a stylized way so that there
is no female nudity. This is by far the least annoying, not to mention most socially
responsible, aspect of her film.
Sarah Jo doesn’t quite get round to pleasuring Arvin (Luka
Sabbat), who leaves behind some alcohol. Treina is very keen to find out more
about him. Arvin, as it turns out, works in the adult entertainment industry
and accepts Sarah Jo’s fan letter to deliver to Vance. She goes to a bar to
seek out Yuli. The bar scene has a particular vibe. Sarah Jo doesn’t know what to drink. ‘How
about a white wine?’ the bartender suggests. Sarah Jo gulps it. She asks for an
introduction to Yuli. Yuli tells the bartender to shut the bar for the night.
He interests Sarah Jo in cocaine, which she snorts then coughs – a first time
hard-drug taker. Yuli then rips her blouse and black buttons fly everywhere.
This disturbs Sarah Jo. Yuli apologises profusely.
Sarah Jo has no idea how to interact meaningfully with other
people. She surprises Josh, Heather, Zach and Heather’s new baby by leaping out
from behind a bush while the family is out for a walk to tell them about all
the sex acts that she has participated in, as if to say, look at me now, I’m
growing up. She is ripe for a restraining order. This causes Heather and Josh
to argue with one another, when Josh is told to take Zach away. The scene is
played for a laugh (laughs would be pushing it) but no one comes out of it with
any credit, certainly not Dunham the filmmaker.
There is a happy ending of sorts. Arvin passes on a video
message from Vance and Sarah Jo takes a job looking after a young girl. The guy
upstairs doesn’t pay his rent. The world isn’t perfect.
The title comes from the expression, ‘it is better than a
poke in the eye with a sharp stick’, which is a backhanded compliment, a level
of sarcasm that Sarah Jo would struggle to understand. The characters that
Dunham has created aren’t exactly relatable, but they’re not completely obnoxious
or threatening either. Dunham does not ‘other’ disability, rather integrate it
in a form of everyday reality. Life is messy. People are defined not by
productive jobs rather than by their interactions. Sharp Stick
isn’t a comfortable film to watch – you don’t laugh at or with the characters.
Dunham depicts a world in which so-called normal people are just as messed up
as so-called disabled people. Each group can derive just as much pleasure out
of life as the other. It is her way of reconciling sadness in her life, which
is not to feel sorry for oneself, but instead to embrace the optimism of her
protagonist. If this annoys people - too bad.
Reviewed at Picturehouse Central, Screen Three, Piccadilly Circus, Central London, Tuesday 8 June 2022, 19:00 screening (Sundance London press show).
Review originally published on Bitlanders.com
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