Meewella | Critic

According to P

Tag: Josh Hamilton

QuickView: Kicking and Screaming (1995)

“Can we have one spontaneous conversation where my dialogue doesn’t end up in your next story?”

Grover

Noah Baumbach’s ear for overlapping dialogue is already evident in his debut film, though Kicking and Screaming’s graduate pseudo-intellectual malaise is derivative of a host of films about stalled adolescence. Its loose approach is at times reminiscent of Richard Linklater’s early work like Slacker and Dazed and Confused, but there is less experimentation in the film-making. Dialogue is plainly the primary strength, Baumbach allowing his characters to work through their issues out loud whilst he also acknowledges their artifice, typically when one is abruptly undercut by another who sees through their façade. Though witty, these are not eruditely word perfect characters, nor is that necessary with familiarity (“You know what I mean. We all know what we mean.” referring to both the friendship group and the audience). Kicking and Screaming is fittingly aimless for graduates waiting for life to begin, only Eric Stoltz’s perennial student understanding that it already has. Baumbach’s exploration of these ideas may be covering well-trodden ground but it does so in a sufficiently engaging way.

6/10

QuickView: Eighth Grade (2018)

Eighth Grade poster

“But it’s like, being yourself is, like, not changing yourself to impress someone else.”

Kayla

Bo Burnham’s directorial debut focuses his attuned voice on an unremarkable young girl clumsily navigating the final week of eighth grade (Year 9 in the UK), but its success is capturing the disconnect between adults and the children with whom they seek to communicate. Elsie Fisher’s astounding portrayal of Kayla’s shy awkwardness is what endears us to the quiet, thoughtful character. Although Kayla is permanently attached to her phone, technology hasn’t really changed the underlying angst as these new teenagers deal with crafting an identity away from their parents and seeking out platonic and romantic relationships. The female perspective invites comparisons with The Edge of Seventeen, but the smaller scope of its narrow timeframe makes Eighth Grade a slice of life rather than a coming-of-age story. Burnham is less interested in nostalgia than capturing reality. The most lasting impression came from Kayla’s YouTube vlogs that pepper the film as a form of narration, in which she earnestly offers the advice that she sorely needs herself.

8/10

"A film is a petrified fountain of thought."

(CC) BY-NC 2003-2025 Priyan Meewella

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