-By Sarah Sluis
Positioned between the fantasy-fueled world of their childhoods and
their wide-eyed initiation into adult experiences, teenagers have a
unique perch from which to narrate their world. Perhaps that’s why
the stylized, comically exaggerated world of Nick Twisp in
Youth
in Revolt goes down so well.
Michael Cera stars as one of those anxious teens desperate to fall
in love and do the deed. While his pursuit of love has an
idealistic urgency, he also scorns the compromises his own divorced
parents have made with their new partners. While on vacation at a
lakeside trailer park with his mother’s newest suitor, a crude
truck driver played by Zach Galifianakis, he meets the object of
his desire, Sheeni Saunders (Portia Doubleday). The eclectic,
isolated teens bond immediately over their love of aging crooners
and Paris.
Torn from the love of his life at vacation’s end, Nick devises a
plan to get back with his girl, which requires him to be very, very
bad. Hopelessly meek, he invents an alternate persona to help him
carry out his mischief: François Dillinger, Cera with a moustache
and channeling “French thief.” Appearing in the same frame as Nick,
the double at first seems like it will be a tiresome tag-along, but
because the tactic is reserved for select scenes, François adds a
welcome comic punch whenever he pops up. Most effectively, Twisp
and Dillinger are both on the scene as they try to bed Sheeni,
leading to a layering of reaction shots as Nick begs for François
to seduce Sheeni and then is rendered speechless by the words
coming out of François’ mouth.
The under-18s in the movie speak with a level of articulation and
odd candor that’s one step removed from savant. “Would you mind
applying this to my exposed areas?” Sheeni inquires in a
sunscreen-application scene, lending an improbable remove to the
implicitly erotic question. This kind of dialogue can be heard in
any number of films and television shows, and brings to mind Wes
Anderson’s affected approach, as well as Adam Brody’s fast-paced,
adult ramblings on teen soap “The O.C.” But while
Youth in
Revolt has a rather familiar brand of peculiarity, its
execution helps it stand out. How else can a scene of Michael Cera
disguised in a dress, one of the oldest tricks in the book, work so
well? By paying attention not only to dialogue-driven humor but
visual gags, costuming and suggestive props, director Miguel Arteta
multiplies the sources of humor to great effect.
Ultimately, however, Youth in Revolt falls into the well-worn path
of teen coming-of-age love/sex comedies. You could call it a more
tightly wound, dialogue-driven version of last year’s
Adventureland, or a more neurotic, intelligent,
love-focused
American Pie. The main premise of nerdy guys trying to
win over girls is the same. Cera, though he shows some range with
the François character, is playing an iteration of his characters
in
Juno,
Superbad and
Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist.
Youth in
Revolt is a fine addition to the teen comedy genre, but even
with the lively François, it falls short of igniting the zeitgeist.
Film Review: Youth in Revolt
Michael Cera adopts a mischievous alter ego in an attempt to reunite with his dream girl in a familiarly peculiar story.
Jan 8, 2010
-By Sarah Sluis
Positioned between the fantasy-fueled world of their childhoods and their wide-eyed initiation into adult experiences, teenagers have a unique perch from which to narrate their world. Perhaps that’s why the stylized, comically exaggerated world of Nick Twisp in
Youth in Revolt goes down so well.
Michael Cera stars as one of those anxious teens desperate to fall in love and do the deed. While his pursuit of love has an idealistic urgency, he also scorns the compromises his own divorced parents have made with their new partners. While on vacation at a lakeside trailer park with his mother’s newest suitor, a crude truck driver played by Zach Galifianakis, he meets the object of his desire, Sheeni Saunders (Portia Doubleday). The eclectic, isolated teens bond immediately over their love of aging crooners and Paris.
Torn from the love of his life at vacation’s end, Nick devises a plan to get back with his girl, which requires him to be very, very bad. Hopelessly meek, he invents an alternate persona to help him carry out his mischief: François Dillinger, Cera with a moustache and channeling “French thief.” Appearing in the same frame as Nick, the double at first seems like it will be a tiresome tag-along, but because the tactic is reserved for select scenes, François adds a welcome comic punch whenever he pops up. Most effectively, Twisp and Dillinger are both on the scene as they try to bed Sheeni, leading to a layering of reaction shots as Nick begs for François to seduce Sheeni and then is rendered speechless by the words coming out of François’ mouth.
The under-18s in the movie speak with a level of articulation and odd candor that’s one step removed from savant. “Would you mind applying this to my exposed areas?” Sheeni inquires in a sunscreen-application scene, lending an improbable remove to the implicitly erotic question. This kind of dialogue can be heard in any number of films and television shows, and brings to mind Wes Anderson’s affected approach, as well as Adam Brody’s fast-paced, adult ramblings on teen soap “The O.C.” But while
Youth in Revolt has a rather familiar brand of peculiarity, its execution helps it stand out. How else can a scene of Michael Cera disguised in a dress, one of the oldest tricks in the book, work so well? By paying attention not only to dialogue-driven humor but visual gags, costuming and suggestive props, director Miguel Arteta multiplies the sources of humor to great effect.
Ultimately, however, Youth in Revolt falls into the well-worn path of teen coming-of-age love/sex comedies. You could call it a more tightly wound, dialogue-driven version of last year’s
Adventureland, or a more neurotic, intelligent, love-focused
American Pie. The main premise of nerdy guys trying to win over girls is the same. Cera, though he shows some range with the François character, is playing an iteration of his characters in
Juno,
Superbad and
Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist.
Youth in Revolt is a fine addition to the teen comedy genre, but even with the lively François, it falls short of igniting the zeitgeist.