Los Angeles Times

Her dreams are seemingly at odds

In the small film ‘The Fits,’ an 11-year-old girl is torn between boxing and dance.

- By Lorraine Ali

Coming-of-age films for girls are rare, and when they do surface, the plots are often as fleeting and thin as a school-age crush.

Enter “The Fits,” a small film about big emotions, where adolescenc­e feels as foreboding and mysterious as a psychologi­cal spy thriller.

Set in a community center in urban Cincinnati, Toni (Royalty Hightower) is an 11year-old tomboy following in her older brother’s footsteps by training as a boxer. But in the auditorium next to the boxing gym, an all-girl dance troupe represents another world she may be on the cusp of joining. The connecting hallway between the practice areas becomes a fraught crossroads in the journey toward Toni’s adult identity. Will it be boxing or

dance? Or both?

Complicati­ng the already complicate­d throes of prepubesce­nce, a wave of mysterious fainting spells and convulsion­s overtake the drill team girls one by one. Is it a virus, a poisoning or are the young women faking it as a way of setting themselves apart from one another in order to ultimately fit in?

“So much of girlhood is about exploring where you stand in the context of a group,” said director Anna Rose Holmer, who decided to pair the rigors of adolescenc­e with the dynamics of a dance troupe after producing the ballet documentar­y “Ballet 422.”

“All the girls we’re putting on screen are complex and complicate­d, questionin­g and content. They carry contradict­ions around with them, making it really hard to define them as a group,” said Holmer, who dropped in the odd plot twist of fainting spells based on her long fascinatio­n with documented bouts of mass hysteria.

“The Fits,” which opens Friday in Los Angeles, premiered last year at the Venice Film Festival, garnering widespread praise, and was an official competitio­n selection at the Sundance Film Festival.

Made with a 150,000-euro grant (about $170,000) from the Venice Biennale Cinema College, “The Fits” stars first-time actors, most of whom are members of Cincinnati’s real-life drill troupe the Q-Kidz. The filmmakers scouted rural cheer squads, drill teams and other dance troupes before discoverin­g the Q-Kidz on YouTube. “The Fits” was shot mostly in the community center the dance squad calls home, a respite for atrisk youth nestled in the projects.

The award-winning dance outfit competes nationwide in drill competitio­ns, facing off against other teams in a style that incorporat­es hip-hop moves, call-and-response routines and bucket-loads of attitude.

“Though these kids haven’t been in a film before, they are performers and profession­als who compete nationally,” said Holmer. “What makes them so great in those areas translates into making the film. I never felt like I was working with inexperien­ced, amateur nonprofess­ionals, it was more like I was collaborat­ing with an elite group of young people who were exceptiona­lly creative.”

Drill routines in the film are a visceral eruption of emotion — the rage of hormones put to a beat. Arms flail, bodies gyrate, feet stomp. It’s the flip side to Toni’s stoicism.

Toni’s conflict between wearing boxing gloves or sparkly nail polish is for the most part internal, making “The Fits” a film with little dialogue.

Hightower is a powerful presence, her intense and unnerving gaze often alluding to some deeper mystery that refreshing­ly has nothing to do with a pink, fuzzy boy crush.

“Sure, sexual awakening, and the haze that comes when your body changes are part of that, but it doesn’t mean before that happens that no work is done in terms of self-identity,” said Holmer. “We wanted something that said this is a complex human being who happens to be an 11-year-old girl. This is going to be an entire experience from her point of view.”

Holmer, who was raised in rural upstate New York, based the idea for the film on her and her filmmaking partners’ preteen experience­s.

“It started as a creative dance film,” said Holmer. “Then Lisa Kjerulff, my producer and co-writer, and Saela Davis, co-writer and editor of the film, talked a lot about our experience­s growing up. They were all very different, so Toni is a meeting point of the three of us.”

As for the spare, minimalist­ic feel of the film: “We wanted to focus on lean, necessary elements of story,” said Holmer. “To see stories through a lean, muscular lens — like an athlete, we used only the body weight needed to perform the task.”

 ?? Oscillosco­pe Laboratori­es ?? ROYALTY HIGHTOWER stars as tomboy Toni in “The Fits,” a coming-of-age movie opening Friday in L.A.
Oscillosco­pe Laboratori­es ROYALTY HIGHTOWER stars as tomboy Toni in “The Fits,” a coming-of-age movie opening Friday in L.A.
 ?? Photograph­s by Oscillosco­pe Laboratori­es ?? TONI (Royalty Hightower) is bewitched by a tight-knit dance team in “The Fits.”
Photograph­s by Oscillosco­pe Laboratori­es TONI (Royalty Hightower) is bewitched by a tight-knit dance team in “The Fits.”
 ??  ?? “WE WANTED something that said this is a complex human being,” director Anna Rose Holmer says of 11-year-old Toni (Royalty Hightower, pictured).
“WE WANTED something that said this is a complex human being,” director Anna Rose Holmer says of 11-year-old Toni (Royalty Hightower, pictured).

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