Chicago Sun-Times

A LONELY TEEN’S BRUTAL FATE

Heartbreak­ing ‘Under the Bridge’ shows how young bullies took the life of an unhappy peer

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

The eight-part Hulu dramatic series “Under the Bridge” is based on the true events of a tragic 1997 murder case in British Columbia that attracted media scrutiny across Canada and beyond, so it wouldn’t be accurate to call this a murder mystery. We know 14-year-old Reena Virk was bullied, beaten and eventually killed, and it would be disrespect­ful to withhold these facts out of some kind of spoiler concern.

Still, with Quinn Shepard doing awardquali­ty work in adapting the late Rebecca Godfrey’s book of the same name, “Under the Bridge” actually is a mystery on many levels, as it examines how and why a group of junior high school-age students, most of them girls, would turn on a peer in such horrific fashion.

With Riley Keough and Lily Gladstone spearheadi­ng the cast as women approachin­g the investigat­ion from vastly different angles, and an impressive group of actors turning in superb work as the shockingly young principals in the case, “Under the Bridge” works as a retelling of a specific time-and-place story, but also a sobering reminder this sort of thing still happens, and far too often. (And social media is often used to fan the flames.)

The suburban setting of “Under the Bridge” is considered a perfect place to live by adult residents such as Police Chief Roy Bentland (Matt Craven) and the uppermiddl­e-class Virks, Suman (Archie Panjabi) and Manjit (Ezra Faroque Khan). Contrast that with Roy’s daughter Cam (Lily Gladstone from “Killers of the Flower Moon”), a police officer who yearns for bigger challenges and has applied for a job with the Vancouver police department, and Chloe Guidry’s Josephine Bell, the leader of a group of troubled girls who live in a group home. (While most of the characters are based on real people, Cam is a fictional construct.) Josephine, a hardbitten and charming manipulato­r, worships John Gotti and the gangster lifestyle, and talks incessantl­y about her dream of moving to New York City and working for Gotti.

This girl is 14 years old. Her so-called ambitions would be laughable if Josephine weren’t dead serious, and her acolytes are all too willing to follow Josephine into trouble.

Reena Virk (Vritika Gupta), the daughter of Suman and Manjit, hates her home life with her loving but strict Jehovah’s Witness parents. An outcast at school who is mocked for her race and her appearance, she is achingly desperate to gain acceptance into Josephine’s gang. Things turn sour, and there’s a party where everything explodes, and the next morning Reena is missing, and we know she is never coming home.

While all this is happening, Riley Keough’s Rebecca has returned home to British Columbia for the first time in a decade. Rebecca’s plan to write about the culture of “Victoria Girls” in general quickly segues into an ad hoc investigat­ion into Reena’s disappeara­nce. To say Rebecca’s methods are unconventi­onal is an understate­ment; she practicall­y embeds with the local teens, making bad choices that veer dangerousl­y close to obstructio­n.

While “Under the Bridge” casts an unblinking eye on Josephine and her cohorts, and Cam’s approach is all about finding justice for Reena, there’s an undercurre­nt of empathy or at least an attempt to understand how these kids could be so callous and violent. When a bunch of students are brought in for questionin­g, most of them don’t have a parent or guardian who can be bothered to be there. (Rebecca learns the police call Josephine and her friends “Bic girls,” like the lighters, “because we’re disposable.”)

The best true-crime series acknowledg­e our collective fascinatio­n with stories about seemingly “normal” people who commit unspeakabl­e crimes — but they also portray the lives of the victim(s) in a way that makes sure these innocent people should be remembered for more than the manner in which they were taken from this world. This is the case with “Under the Bridge.” The series takes great care to tell the backstory of the Virk family, to illustrate the anguish and loneliness Reena Virk was feeling as a girl trapped between worlds, and to remind us Reena was much more than a victim on a security camera. The result is a riveting and heartbreak­ingly realistic work.

 ?? ?? ‘UNDER THE BRIDGE’
An eight-episode series premiering with two episodes Wednesday on Hulu, with a new episode available each Wednesday through May 29.
‘UNDER THE BRIDGE’ An eight-episode series premiering with two episodes Wednesday on Hulu, with a new episode available each Wednesday through May 29.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Lily Gladstone from “Killers of the Flower Moon” plays a police officer investigat­ing the girl’s disappeara­nce.
Lily Gladstone from “Killers of the Flower Moon” plays a police officer investigat­ing the girl’s disappeara­nce.
 ?? HULU PHOTOS ?? An outcast teen (Vritika Gupta) goes missing in “Under the Bridge.”
HULU PHOTOS An outcast teen (Vritika Gupta) goes missing in “Under the Bridge.”

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