Engrossing ‘Science Fair’ finds winning formula
You don’t need to know your endothelial cells from your amygdala to fall in love with “Science Fair,” an ebullient documentary about high school students competing at the International Science and Engineering Fair, or ISEF.
It’s a “Mad Hot Ballroom” for the science-club set, but thanks to an endearing cast of characters, it’s also a total crowd-pleaser. Upbeat, optimistic and idealistic, it’s a snapshot of a generation that may yet usher in a brighter, better future.
The film’s journaliststurned-directors, Cristina Costantini (a former science-fair kid) and Darren Foster, expertly fashion reallife material into something that feels like a great sports movie — dramatic, suspenseful, engrossing.
They lead with an interview with the 2012
ISEF winner, Jack Andracka, who tells us what’s at stake: $75,000 and nearguaranteed admission to the college of your choice, along with such fun perks as visiting the White House and conducting your own TED Talk.
“Winning,” Andracka tells us, “will change your life in ways you don’t even comprehend.”
From there, we meet our cast of characters, several of whom could anchor a movie of their own. Robbie, an eccentric slacker from West Virginia, hopes to make up for bad grades by winning a prize with his artificial intelligence project. Kashfia, a Muslim girl virtually unknown at her South Dakota high school, has been quietly conducting a neural study on risktaking behavior. Myllena and Gabriel, from Brazil, are working on a shoestring budget to curb the Zika virus that invaded their hometown.
Just when we think we’ve found the hero we’ll root for, “Science Fair” introduces us to someone else who steals away our loyalties.
The film’s most formidable figure is Serena Mccalla, the daughter of Jamaican immigrants and now a science teacher at New York’s Jericho High School, a repeat winner at the ISEF over the past several years. Supportive and encouraging but also quick to explode over a sloppy detail,
Mccalla has earned the respect and adoration of her nine-person team.
One of her students, an Asian boy with a cheery smile, seems to enjoy Mccalla’s occasional browbeating. “It reminds me of my life in China,” he says.
Running through “Science Fair” is an egalitarian theme: A good idea can come from anybody, anywhere. Cliche as it sounds, the students seem to genuinely value the fair itself more than the prizes they might win.