The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

In Jersey, a rapper that don’t know where she’s flowin’

- By Ann Hornaday

Patti Dombrowski is 23 years old, living in a working-class northern New Jersey suburb with her mother and grandmothe­r, tending bar at a local watering hole and nursing dreams of stardom. A Bruce Springstee­n song plays while we watch Patti’s daily routine, and in many ways she embodies the Boss’ most enduring musical characters: the strivers who continue to yearn for something better, no matter how many times their hopes are dashed by a rigged system, self-deception or simple crummy luck.

But Patti veers from the typical Jersey-girl stereotype in important ways that “Patti Cake$,” Geremy Jasper’s endearing, infectious­ly inspiring debut feature, both confronts and celebrates. Played by the freckled, frizzy-haired Danielle Macdonald, Patti is a heavyset white girl who longs to be a rapper, spitting motivation­al rhymes into her bathroom mirror just before attending to her ailing Nana (played by a nearly unrecogniz­able Cathy Moriarty). Patti longs to leave her life — to get signed by the hip-hop impresario O-Z (Sahr Ngaujah) and live in the closest thing she has Title: Patti Cake$ Cast: Danielle Macdonald, Bridget Everett, Siddharth Dhananjay, Mamoudou Athie Director: Geremy Jasper Rating: Stars: Running time:

R 3 out of 4 109minutes

to Emerald City, a Manhattan penthouse — but she’s no moaner. She unhappily endures the taunts of her peers (who call her “Dumbo”) and the neediness and criticisms of her mother, Barb (Bridget Everett), but Patti has a loyal best friend and collaborat­or named Jheri (Siddharth Dhananjay) who, along with her raspyvoice­d Nana, shares her resolute belief in her own talent.

Macdonald, who is from Australia, imbues her character with just the right balance of tenacity and vulnerabil­ity. She not only masters the New Jersey accent, but also completely owns Patti’s raps, which hew to the coarse convention­s of the form and also burst with its unbridled brio, humor and incisive observatio­n. During a pivotal rap battle in “Patti Cake$,” for which Jasper wrote Patti’s brilliantl­y cutting rhymes, a boy she has a crush on calls her “the white Precious.” It’s intended as an insult, but the comparison is apt: Like Gabourey Sidibe’s indelible, indomitabl­e young heroine, Patti is a force of nature, an avatar of girl power at its most spontaneou­s and ungovernab­le.

The structure of “Patti Cake$” is familiar to anyone who’s watched a movie about a kid from the sticks longing for her first big break. There’s even a sweet love story that takes shape alongside the usual setbacks and star-making metamorpho­ses. Thanks to Jasper’s sure hand, judicious dashes of magical realism and clear love for his characters and their environmen­t, “Patti Cake$” never feels cliche or mechanical. What’s more, he doesn’t hesitate to confront the issues of appropriat­ion and identity that undergird his idealistic narrative. When one character accuses Patti of being a “culture vulture,” both she and the audience are invited to question whether her passion is a pose or something more authentic. And he has a superb eye for talent. In addition to Macdonald, the filmmaker has made a slew of promising discoverie­s here, including Dhananjay and Mamoudou Athie, who plays an offbeat musician Patti and Jheri meet at an openmic night.

As confident as Macdonald is with Patti’s raps, the most electrifyi­ng moments of “Patti Cake$” take place between her and Everett, a real-life cabaret singer who turns out to be the perfect choice to play the embittered Barb, a onetime blues singer who has taken out her own disappoint­ments on the daughter she insists on treating like a sister. Paying respectful homage to the music of Barb’s era, “Patti Cake$” winds up being a celebratio­n of art, enterprise and self-invention that’s as tough as it is touching. At the risk of mixing metaphors, not to mention musical genres, it rocks.

 ?? COURTESY OF FOX SEARCHLIGH­T PICTURES ?? Australian actress Danielle Macdonald delivers a breakout performanc­e in “Patti Cake$.”
COURTESY OF FOX SEARCHLIGH­T PICTURES Australian actress Danielle Macdonald delivers a breakout performanc­e in “Patti Cake$.”

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