Windsor Star

Lady Bird a rewarding, honest tale

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com

LADY BIRD

out of 5 Cast: Saoirse Ronan, Laurie Metcalf, Lucas Hedges Director: Greta Gerwig Duration: 1 h 34 m There have been plenty of movies set in the early years of this century, but Lady Bird might qualify as the first 2002 period piece. From a time when Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill was still contempora­ry rock, when the nearest thing to podcasts were books on tape and not having a cellphone didn’t make you a Luddite, this love letter to a singular time and place casts its line back 15 years and hooks the audience with the details. It’s a truth worth repeating: The more specific you make your coming-of-age story, the more universal it becomes.

The star of the picture is Christine (Lady Bird) McPherson, a high-school senior in Sacramento, Calif. And the film’s triumphal writer-director is Greta Gerwig, who — surprise! — was a Sacramento senior herself back in ’02.

So feel free to watch this as autobiogra­phy, but know that Gerwig has taken all sorts of liberties. Lady Bird has the ring of truth, but the harmonics of great fiction.

Lady Bird, like many an 18-year-old, can’t wait for life to begin. “I wish I could live through something,” she moans to her mother (Laurie Metcalf ) in the opening scene, and then chucks herself out of the car door during an argument about university. It’s the classic teenaged I’ll-show-you.

Lady Bird (“It’s my given name,” she says. “I gave it to myself.”) has a decent, loving family — though again, she can turn on a dime between defending them and complainin­g that they don’t understand her. She has a good friend in Julie (Beanie Feldstein), but a secret desire to trade up to wealthy Jenna (Mila Kunis look-alike Odeya Rush). She is smitten first by the all-American Danny (Lucas Hedges), then by the more broody Kyle (Timothée Chalamet), particular­ly after finding Danny with someone else.

There’s also just enough gentle wisdom to let you take away something more than your receipt and popcorn bag. When a teacher suggests that Lady Bird loves Sacramento, given the affectiona­te way she writes about it, the young woman is puzzled. She hates Sacramento, or thinks she does.

When she says she just pays attention, the teacher replies: “Don’t you think they are the same thing? Love and attention?”

She’s right, of course. And Lady Bird will definitely hold your attention.

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