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Hitting books is smart

- Starring: LEIGH PAATSCH

Kaitlyn Dever, Beanie Feldstein, Jessica Williams, Skyler Gisondo.

Racing to rewrite the whole story before the final chapter ends

PULL apart the pages of the Booksmart screenplay and you will soon see how much of it is comprised of something old, something borrowed and something blue.

The old? That would be the now-ancient premise of two teenage best friends embarking on the biggest night of their lives while enduring one smallscale disaster after another.

The borrowed? Remember the 2007 get-them-to-theparty-on-time classic Superbad? Booksmart sticks to the same storytelli­ng template, a shrewd shortcut to keep both racing the clock and raising the stakes. What about the blue? Booksmart revels in a sense of humour that is undeniably daring — and, yes, sometimes even dirty — and almost always, dynamicall­y funny.

Put together, Booksmart definitely amounts to something new: a female-driven coming-of-age comedy crammed to the hilt with quotable dialogue, irresistib­le breakout performanc­es, and inspired direction throughout.

The two BFFs at the centre of Booksmart have reached the second-last day of high school, and are about to be crushed by a heavy epiphany.

Molly (Beanie Feldstein) and Amy (Kaitlyn Dever) thought they were superior beings to their classmates, having done nothing but study for the past four years.

While their peers smoked dope, rode skateboard­s and posted on social media, Molly and Amy dutifully stayed put and did their homework.

While they have both been accepted into prestigiou­s colleges, so, too, have a majority of their fellow students. Molly and Amy thought they had a head start on everybody. Instead, they merely deprived themselves of four years of fun.

So now, with one night left to graduation, these two very sheltered young ladies are on a mission to come out of their shells, and catch up on everything they have missed out on. All they have to do is work out where the big party is that everyone else is going to.

While its general synopsis looks familiar on paper, its expansion and execution on screen is something truly out of the ordinary. All characters, major and minor (this is a superbly cast picture, by the way), have a way of delivering and exchanging lines that is precisely tuned to the same comedic wavelength.

This is a rare commodity in any movie, let alone one largely staffed by complete unknowns.

Much of the kudos for the genuine wit, sly creativity and unbridled vitality pulsing from every scene must go to firsttime director Olivia Wilde. Though best known as an actor (she was Quorra in TRON: Legacy), her future as a star filmmaker looks assured if Booksmart is any indication.

 ?? Pictures: FRANCOIS DUHAMEL/ ANNAPURNA PICTURES ?? PARTY TIME: Mason Gooding and Beanie Feldstein in Olivia Wilde’s directoria­l debut, Booksmart. Below, Kaitlyn Dever as Amy and Feldstein as Molly.
Pictures: FRANCOIS DUHAMEL/ ANNAPURNA PICTURES PARTY TIME: Mason Gooding and Beanie Feldstein in Olivia Wilde’s directoria­l debut, Booksmart. Below, Kaitlyn Dever as Amy and Feldstein as Molly.

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