San Francisco Chronicle

What sequels to “Lady Bird” might depict about Sacramento.

- Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square. To comment, submit your letter to the editor at www.sfchronicl­e.com/letters.

Good news in Sacramento: “Lady Bird,” a coming-of-age film set there and directed by Sacrmento’s own Greta Gerwig — has been nominated for five Academy Awards, including best picture.

Here’s the better news: Gerwig says she will make three more films about her hometown.

“I would like to make a quartet of films in Sacramento,” Gerwig told the Sacramento Bee. “I have three more before the quartet is done.”

What will these films be about? No one, perhaps not even Gerwig herself, knows. But here’s hoping Gerwig explores Sacramento’s severe challenges, from soaring housing prices to a weak jobs market. Lady Bird takes on the city’s low levels of college graduates. The title character — a teenager named Lady Bird — is so disappoint­ed with Sacramento’s second-tier cultural and higher-education offerings that she leaves for private college in New York. Such brain drain is common in real life. Sacramento ranks 58th out of 102 American metro areas in educationa­l attainment.

So — in the spirit of civic renewal — I offer the Oscar-nominated director ideas for four sequels:

“Lady Bird Gets Her Tree”

A homesick Lady Bird, in her late 20s, moves back and visits coffee shops for six months before deciding that Old Soul best fits her aura. She and her artist boyfriend (Michael B. Jordan) fall behind on the $1,500 monthly rent on an Oak Park one-bedroom, because their only steady jobs are driving for Lyft. After their landlord evicts them so he can rent to richer Bay Area refugees, Lady Bird relocates to the American River homeless encampment. But Lady Bird, inspired by the region’s beautiful tree canopy, builds a tree house in West Sacramento, and the housing-friendly council lets her keep it.

“Lady Bird: Hired Liar”

In this black comedy, Lady Bird returns to lobby for children’s groups. She discovers that not only do legislator­s not care about children but also that, in a horror movie turn, they keep millions of children in a secret, offbudget city beneath the Capitol.

Lady Bird falls into despair. But then she meets a wealthy British-born telecommun­ications lobbyist (Tom Hiddleston). They carry out a torrid love affair in his San Francisco pied-a-terre and his Tahoe chateau. She likes the fine life and becomes a lobbyist for developer Angelo Tsakopoulo­s.

When her beau proposes marriage over “farm-to-fork” nachos in a luxury box at a Kings game, Lady Bird replies:

“Yes, on one condition. We never have children. Because the schools here suck.”

“Lady Bird in the Swamp”

After eating a deep-fried, baconwrapp­ed peanut butter cup at the state fair, Lady Bird becomes disoriente­d on her way home and drives into a delta slough. She’s rescued by a seventhgen­eration pear farmer (Chris Pine), who makes her his wife. The film becomes a climate change pastoral, as Lady Bird observes the worsening cycles of flood and drought in the swamp, and takes on the DIY job of putting her home on stilts.

Then mysterious engineers appear on the property. Powerful water agencies are secretly drilling an undergroun­d water tunnel supposedly abandoned long ago.

In a final act out of “Erin Brockovich,” Lady Bird investigat­es and digs a hole that puts her body in front of the tunneling machine. She is killed, but so is the water tunnel project. Finally.

“Lady Bird vs. the Apocalypse”

Gerwig’s agent might want her to do a bigger payday action film — set in Sacramento, of course.

In 2050, years after her death in the delta tunnel, new technology brings Lady Bird back as a part-human-partmachin­e cyborg. She settles in Sacramento — until a Pineapple Express weather system rains over the city for months, collapsing levees and completely flooding her hometown.

Searching for higher ground, she heads first to the Sierra foothills, but a vigilante squad of gun-toting locals shoots at her and other city refugees, because they vote too Democratic. So, after building a raft from old wood furniture, she heads west across the floodwater­s to Davis. There, NIMBYs express sympathy for Sacramento’s dispossess­ed but refuse to accept the refugees, saying they cannot possibly support any more developmen­t.

Out of options, Lady Bird swims through the floodwater­s south to downtown Stockton, where she takes shelter in the abandoned Federal Building. Inside, she discovers an old, rugged man who is also part machine (Harrison Ford). He takes her on his catamaran back to Sacramento, where they restore order and kick some serious butt.

After that, everything is OK in California’s capital.

 ?? Merie Wallace / A24 Films ?? An Oscar nominee for her original screenplay, director Greta Gerwig works on the set of “Lady Bird.”
Merie Wallace / A24 Films An Oscar nominee for her original screenplay, director Greta Gerwig works on the set of “Lady Bird.”

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