Empire (UK)

LADY BIRD

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OUT 16 FEBRUARY CERT 15 / 94 MINS

DIRECTOR Greta Gerwig CAST Saoirse Ronan, Laurie Metcalf, Tracy Letts, Timothée Chalamet, Lucas Hedges

PLOT Lady Bird (Ronan) is a precocious 17-year-old on the brink of adulthood. She simply needs to survive the bumps of friendship­s, first loves and her relationsh­ip with her mother (Metcalf) before she leaves for college and her life really begins.

“I WISH I could live through something,” sighs 17-year-old Christine Mcpherson, frustrated and bored in her Catholic high school in a small town in Sacramento, or as she despairing­ly calls it, “the Midwest of California”. She dreams of going to an arts college on the East Coast — though her family can only really afford the local college, much to the quiet heartache of her out-of-work dad, Larry (Letts) — and so she taps her heels against the door marked escape while the parental bond continues to fray and thin beneath her feet. She insists that they, everyone, call her ‘Lady Bird’ (her self-declared given name as it was “given to me by me”) and treats her parents, brother, friends and teachers with an only-at-17 sense of spirited narcissism.

The scuffed heart of the film lies not so much in the relationsh­ip of Lady Bird and her mother Marion (Metcalf in a career-best performanc­e), but in the space between them. A space that is by turns dark, hilarious, raw, cruel and tender. Few films have so precisely prodded and pared the fragile skin of that specific relationsh­ip, while watching how the scars form. The tone is set in the opening scene when, unable to articulate herself during a fight about college, Lady Bird throws herself out of her mother’s moving car instead.

The other usual milestones are set up — losing her virginity (“I was on top! Who the fuck is on top the first time?” she exclaims memorably), breaking up with her first boyfriend (Hedges), crushing on the cool guy (Chalamet), losing her best friend (played beautifull­y by Beanie Feldstein) — and while all are entirely typical teen rituals, writer-director Greta Gerwig tells them anything but typically.

Gerwig’s singular talent in creating a rich emotional world, particular­ly for young women, is apparent — she wrote the exceptiona­l Frances Ha and Mistress America — and you can see, feel, hear her in every breath and beat of this, her first solo-credit feature that she’s described as a love letter to her hometown.

It’s painfully hilarious, painfully beautiful, joyful and uncynical, with exquisite hilarity sewn into the details (and by God, this film is funny). It’s the details that make this not your average teenage drama, pivoting on a seminal issue or moral or moment. It’s the tens, hundreds, thousands of moments that sometimes mean everything and sometimes mean nothing and most often, just something. The moments that shape us into our selves — the definition and sharp

lines emerging alongside adulthood.

The skill of both Gerwig’s storytelli­ng and Saoirse Ronan’s characteri­sation is ensuring Lady Bird never loses her likeabilit­y. Her affectatio­ns and arrogance are tempered by selfdeprec­ation and rivers of charm. You sense she’s still waiting for her life to begin, still choosing who she should be, afraid of being an average middle-class girl, with average grades and an average life. But what she doesn’t realise is she’s already being who she is meant to be. And one day, when the pain, the rituals of being 17 are over, she’ll just be left with warmth, with wonder and with wit. The very things Lady Bird delivers in spades. The rest of it will just be a beautiful memory, utter sweetness remembered on the tip of a tongue. Terri White

Verdict A coming-of-age story like no other, Lady Bird is smart, emotional, funny and completely original. rarely has a directoria­l debut been so assured, so singular and so heartwarmi­ngly affecting.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from left: Lady Bird (Saoirse Ronan) and mum Marion (Laurie Metcalf) suffer mother-daughter issues; Childhood friendship falters for Lady Bird and Julie (Beanie Feldstein); Cool kid Kyle (Timothée Chalamet); Happier times with boyfriend Danny...
Clockwise from left: Lady Bird (Saoirse Ronan) and mum Marion (Laurie Metcalf) suffer mother-daughter issues; Childhood friendship falters for Lady Bird and Julie (Beanie Feldstein); Cool kid Kyle (Timothée Chalamet); Happier times with boyfriend Danny...
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