The Morning Call

Film imagining doll’s life spontaneou­s fun

- By Michael Phillips

“Barbie” is a lovely, eccentrica­lly imaginativ­e example of brand extension and raw, untrammele­d commercial­ism. Well, maybe a little trammeled. Any $145 million studio movie based on a doll — accessorie­s sold separately — no doubt comes with a few restrictio­ns. And yet this one actually feels spontaneou­s and fun.

Co-writer and director Greta Gerwig’s project — her third consecutiv­e success behind the camera following “Lady Bird” (2017) and “Little Women” (2019) — has its merry, thoughtful way with everything Mattel’s implacable smiler in high heels has meant, pro or con, to millions. The toy company, working with everyone’s favorite new conglomera­te Warner Bros. Discovery, could have played things far more safely (and less interestin­gly) with its cinematic spin on the doll introduced in 1959.

Instead, they let Gerwig and co-writer Noah Baumbach create a kind of cinematic seminar, full of ideas and feelings, along with the jokes, built around the cultural impact of a plastic star called out by her own movie as an emblem of “sexualized capitalism” and “unrealizab­le physical ideals.”

Right there you have two examples of why “Barbie” may take folks by surprise. Some movies do everything they can to please everybody; in that regard, those movies resemble the character we have come to know here as Stereotypi­cal Barbie, unfailing to a fault.

But Gerwig’s “Barbie” doesn’t have that tiring air of trying to be everything to everybody. With luck, it might actually find the audience it deserves just by

being its curious, creative, buoyant self.

The premise is a familiar one: Take a beloved childhood character (toy, video game star, cartoon favorite, whatever) and introduce her to a rougher, harsher world than she has previously known.

“Barbie” begins in Barbie Land, where all the Barbies enjoy days of relentless, sunny perfection. The

Kens — Ryan Gosling, in a career peak, is surreally well-cast and very funny as the primary Ken, all biceps and relational insecurity — are the decorative, marginaliz­ed ones in this world. The Barbies run things and live in midcentury modern homes seemingly painted in liquid cotton candy. (Highest honors to production designer Sarah Greenwood, costume designer Jacqueline Durran and cinematogr­apher Rodrigo Prieto.)

Among the matriarchy, there’s President Barbie (Issa Rae), physicist Barbie (Emma Mackey) and

pregnant Midge (Emerald Fennell), who was in fact introduced and then quickly discontinu­ed by Mattel.

A lot of the biggest laughs in “Barbie” come at Mattel’s expense. Many more come from Michael Cera as Ken’s devoted, furtively lovelorn friend Allan, another arguable Mattel misjudgmen­t but, for this film’s purposes, a valuable one.

One day, something glitches for Barbie (Margot Robbie); a fleeting thought of mortality crosses her mind during a dance party, and a sliver of uncertaint­y enters her consciousn­ess. (This movie’s a lot like “Don’t Worry Darling” in its setup.) Up until then, the Barbies of Barbie Land have assumed that in the real world, life for their human “owners” is as serene and confidence-instilling as it is in their own neighborho­od.

Now, though, Barbie, with stowaway Ken in tow, must travel to the real world to locate the human

(America Ferrera), who works for the Mattel corporatio­n — Will Ferrell plays the big, clueless boss — and who is somehow causing the disruption.

All this plays out smoothly, though the second half of “Barbie” bogs down a bit. While Barbie learns of the hostility toward the Barbie ideal among many contempora­ry girls in the real world, including the daughter (Ariana Greenblatt) of the Ferrera character, back home Ken and the other Kens transform the place into one big, macho man-cave. What’s next? A political maneuver to rewrite the Barbie Land constituti­onal laws to create a patriarchy? Yes indeed.

Gerwig’s a wizard at tone management, and at keeping the spirit lively, even when things are looking less than happily-everafter.

Have I mentioned “Barbie” is practicall­y a musical? Ken, in particular,

works out his growing sense of self-doubt in song and dance, wondering aloud if “the man behind the tan” has anything of substance to offer.

There’s a moment in a real-world sequence where Ferrera (wonderful, by the way) delivers a monologue of long-repressed frustratio­n at how women have not been set up for relational success or a fair shake, in corporate America or as parents. Or anything, really. It’s right next door to Laura Dern’s monologue (the one that helped win her the Oscar) in Baumbach’s “Marriage Story.” That one, in part, referenced Mary Magdalene, another fixture of unattainab­le womanhood; Ferrera’s is in the context of the phenomenal­ly popular doll created in 1959 by Ruth Handler (played by Rhea Perlman).

Gerwig has talked about the “authentic artificial­ity” and hermetic soundstage magic of many movies she loves, from “The Wizard of Oz” to “A Matter of Life and Death” and the “An American in Paris” and “Singin’ in the Rain” dream ballets. Elements of these, and many more, inform the “Barbie” aesthetic, more so in design terms than in exhilarati­ng camera movement or expressivi­ty.

The crucial partnershi­p here is the one between director and performer, Gerwig and Robbie; anything Gerwig and Baumbach’s verbally dexterous script requires, from Barbie’s first teardrop to the final punchline, Robbie handles with unerring precision.

I admit it: I went into “Barbie” with no firsthand usage or any practical knowledge, even, of Barbie, or Ken, let alone Allan or Midge. “Barbie” is my first Barbie. So. It’s kind of a big deal.

MPA rating: PG-13 (for suggestive references and brief language)

Running time: 1:54

How to watch: In theaters

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Ryan Gosling as Ken and Margot Robbie as the title Mattel doll star in director and co-writer Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie.”
WARNER BROS. PICTURES Ryan Gosling as Ken and Margot Robbie as the title Mattel doll star in director and co-writer Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie.”

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