The Denver Post

REVIEW: “How to Talk to Girls at Parties” is sci-fi confection that works.

- By Michael O’Sullivan Dean Rogers, A24

★★¼5 Rated R. 102 minutes.

“How to Talk to Girls at Parties” is a candy-colored sci-fi confection set in 1977 London, where Enn (Alex Sharp), a shy Clash fan, meets and falls in love with a pretty member of a colony of visiting extraterre­strials.

The title notwithsta­nding, I hesitate to call this alien creature a “girl.” Although the character of Zan is played — or, in the parlance of the film, manifested — by Elle Fanning, her anatomical gender does not precisely conform to that of female humans. While Zan and Enn — short for Henry, pronounced with a Cockney accent — are mostly chaste, there are other scenes of interspeci­es sex, but it ain’t like in the movies (unless that movie happens to involve body-cavity probes).

Exactly what Zan’s colony wants here is unclear. Do they come in peace, e.g., for research? Or for more nefarious purposes? That question — the central mystery of so many alien-invasion thrillers — takes a back seat to the enigmas of the human heart, in what amounts to a bitterswee­t, if slight, metaphor about love by John Cameron Mitchell (“Hedwig and the Angry Inch”).

The real question is this: Who exactly is more alien — Zan and her fellow E.T.s, who behave like androids dressed in haute couture, circa 1965, or Enn and his coterie of spikehaire­d and nose-thumbing punks (epitomized by the abrasive band manager Queen Boadicea, played by Nicole Kidman)? A girl, in the eyes of a teenage boy, is like something from another planet, and vice versa — or so the film sug- gests.

Although the movie is based on a 2006 short story by Neil Gaiman, it’s more like a version of “Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus,” but with loud guitars. (There’s also an element of “Romeo and Juliet,” in the central device of starcrosse­d love. That explains the climactic showdown between the punks and the otherworld­ly interloper­s, which is tedious and far from the point of the film.)

Setting the film in the punk heyday underscore­s the film’s themes of per-

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When it works, it works. And even when it doesn’t, it’s just endearing enough to earn a bit of forgivenes­s for its flaws. As Zan says to Enn, an aspiring artist and writer who shows her the comic-book zine that is his magnum opus: “There are contradict­ions in your metaphor, but I am moved by it.”

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