Four stars. Rated R, for profanity and sexual candor
By Derrick Bang
Well into writer/director Greta
Gerwig’s accomplished filmmaking debut, the story’s protagonist is complimented
— by her high school counselor — on the depth of feeling she expresses, in a
college application essay, for the city in which she has grown up: a city from
which she’s eager to escape.
The city is Sacramento, where
Gerwig herself grew up, and her film exhibits the same reverence. Indeed, I
doubt Sacramento ever again will be the subject of such a heartfelt cinematic
valentine.
Lady Bird can’t help feeling
semi-autobiographical; Gerwig’s characteristic personality shines throughout,
easily recognized from her starring roles in quirky indie dramedies such as Lola Versus, Frances Ha and Mistress America. Her filmmaking debut is both an engaging and painfully raw
coming-of-age saga, and a respectful appreciation for the environment that
shaped her as an artist.
A kiss on Sacramento’s cheek, and
an earnest Thank You.
But that’s merely the narrative
portion of Gerwig’s film. She also deserves credit for coaxing persuasively
intimate performances from her stars: most notably Saoirse Ronan and Laurie
Metcalf, who deliver one of the most tempestuous, complicated and deeply loving
mother/daughter relationships ever depicted on camera.
The year is 2002, as the United
States enters a new national mindset in the wake of 9/11. We meet Ronan’s
Christine McPherson on the eve of her senior year in high school, which she’s
horrified to discover will be spent at a Catholic school. She’s a rebellious young
adult, with strikingly dyed hair and an insistence that everybody — even family
members — refer to her as “Lady Bird”: a name she has given herself, as opposed
to the one that was thrust upon her.
She has little use for her post-college
brother Miguel (Jordan Rodrigues) and his girlfriend Shelly (Marielle Scott),
both of whom share the small, cramped house which is all that Lady Bird’s
parents — Marion (Laurie Metcalf) and Larry (Tracy Letts) — can afford. Lady
Bird is deeply ashamed of living on “the wrong side of the tracks”; it’s one of
the innumerable “slights” that she takes personally, and for which she —
unjustly, and immaturely — blames her parents.
She’s a teenager, in every horrific
sense of the term: stubborn, selfish, shallow, spiteful and short-tempered.