National Post

DIARY OF A TEENAGE GIRL

A journey into adulthood doesn’t let you escape feeling confused over passion

- By David Berry

There’s a bit of a proxy argument that springs up in The Diary of a Teenage Girl every time a news report about Pattie Hearst pops onto one of their floor-model TV sets (this is San Francisco in the ‘70s, so it’s always close at hand). Her mind has been warped, goes one side, taken hostage by dastardly villains who have convinced her she wants something she doesn’t; who are we to decide exactly what it is she wants, goes the other, and maybe robbing banks is the perfect antidote to the restrictiv­e life of an heiress?

Minnie (Bel Powley), the teenage girl of the movie’s title, isn’t exactly held hostage, at least not by anything other than the raging hormones that have her checking out other women’s breasts and licking the crotch of Iggy Pop posters. She is, though, carrying on an affair with her mother’s 35-year-old boyfriend Monroe (Alexander Skarsgard), and there are certain advantages that a two-decade head start on dealing with hormones and the emotional undercurre­nts of sex provide you, not the least of which is you rarely have to settle for licking posters when the mood strikes.

Diary of a Teenage Girl is too rambunctio­us and ambitious a thing to be contained to just one argument, or even just one relationsh­ip, but the freshest air it breathes is in the way it unabashedl­y dives into Minnie’s point of view on the affair, finds a space where a creep with a moustache and some decidedly juvenile flirting techniques — there’s quite a lot of shady tickling in Monroe and Minnie’s private moments — can be both exploitati­ve and a legitimate source of lust, love and awakening for her.

The movie is so thoroughly inside Minnie’s head that it turns her inner conversati­ons into animated characters that walk beside her. Diary creates a superposit­ion of truth, with pride of place given to the girl: she likes sex and this makes her feel good, despite the fact that even her equally sex-crazed friend smells something off. It’s an honest accounting of passion, which is a font of plenty of stupid, if momentaril­y enjoyable, behaviour.

If Minnie is too young to do anything other than drown in fleeting feelings, though, the people around her generally have fewer excuses: this is also very much a story of how horrendous people are with burgeoning female sexuality, how they try to temper and mould it into something that suits their needs. Partly this is stuff like the teenage boys Minnie carries on with, who are almost literally blown away (ahem), by her confidence and ravenousne­ss, one of them going so far as to say her passion and desire scare him, which you can see crushes her.

Moreso, though, it’s the adults: if Munroe is too easily and absently turning her into someone who’s mature in ways that don’t involve sex organs, the other adults in her life are clueless. Her mother (Kristen Wiig) is living a post-hippie life, often drunk at best, and can only offer her vague assurances of her youthful “power,” more jealous of it than interested in helping Minnie figure it out. Her father, a stuffy, absent academic (Christophe­r Meloni) seems equally resentful that women have sexual agency at all, and remains essentiall­y ignorant that it’s something Minnie might even be doing. Minnie’s alone, wisdom-wise, which makes her a disturbing­ly appropriat­e everygirl.

All of this plays out achingly well across Powley’s face and body, both of which are perfectly pitched between the baby fat of youth and the worked-in gauntness of womanhood. She has perfectly mastered a look that is trying to appear knowing but betrays its own striving, and her wornin enthusiasm and confusion ground the latter parts of the film, especially when it shades into lost girl moralizing. Throughout, she is a bundle of exuberance and contradict­ion, lost but striding forward confidentl­y, fabulously aware of the ground she’s walking on, but not that she’s heading for a cliff. A real teenager, you might say. ∂∂∂½

An honest accounting of passion, which is a font of plenty of stupid, enjoyable behaviour

 ?? Sam Emerson / Sony Pict ures Clasics via AP ?? Kristen Wiig, from left, as Charlotte Goetze, Bel Powley as Minnie Goetze and Alexander
Skarsgard as Monroe in a scene from the film Dairy of a Teenage Girl.
Sam Emerson / Sony Pict ures Clasics via AP Kristen Wiig, from left, as Charlotte Goetze, Bel Powley as Minnie Goetze and Alexander Skarsgard as Monroe in a scene from the film Dairy of a Teenage Girl.

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