The Denver Post

“Girls State” on Apple TV+: one nation, under girls

- By Natalia Winkelman

In 2018, more than 1,000 boys gathered in Texas for an elaborate, weeklong program aimed at students interested in politics. This meeting of teenage minds — part of a countrywid­e initiative sponsored by the American Legion — was captured in the Sundance hit “Boys State,” a verite chronicle of the event, where participan­ts are elected by their peers to different positions in government.

Considerin­g that movie’s success, it hardly comes as a surprise that the filmmakers, Amanda Mcbaine and Jesse Moss, used their momentum to produce the follow-up “Girls State.” The directors shot the documentar­y in 2022 at Lindenwood University, in St. Charles, Mo., where, the movie repeatedly notes, it’s the first time that the boys and girls groups are holding their events simultaneo­usly on the same campus.

If you are imagining coed frivolity or drama, though, think again: These motivated girls are only concerned about the boys insofar as their proximity highlights the lack of parity between their programs. We meet Emily Worthmore, one of the film’s central subjects, as she ticks off achievemen­ts. At Girls State, Emily, a conservati­ve Christian, hopes to be elected governor, a goal she shares with the left-leaning Cecilia Bartin, who canvasses the lunchroom by shouting from a chair. Others, including Nisha Murali, eye seats on the program’s Supreme Court, which the attendees anticipate will hear an abortion case.

If the vibe of “Boys State” is that of a Young Republican­s conference, the atmosphere at “Girls State” suggests a freshman orientatio­n. By turns giddy and gutsy, the students share in communal songs, icebreaker­s and empowermen­t sessions. They seem to intuit that camaraderi­e goes hand in hand with political ambition, and that they shouldn’t take the curriculum, or themselves, too seriously. Here, cute selfies and resume building receive equal attention.

Modesty, sympathy, generosity — these are valuable qualities in life and not necessaril­y in documentar­y cinema, where tension often acts as a narrative engine. The film tries to complicate its sororal ethos by pointing to the ways in which women are socialized to strive for perfection and avoid raising a stink. But as the film goes on to track a series of frictionle­ss exercises in campaignin­g, litigation and reporting, one wishes there were more complex ideas introduced in tandem.

“Girls State” uncovers a fascinatin­g division early on after Emily remarks that she has no trouble identifyin­g the girls who lean liberal.

“Maybe they’re just,” she pauses, searching for a diplomatic term. “Louder?” The filmmakers pair this observatio­n with a shot in which a cluster of attendees, led by Cecilia, joyfully chant Pitbull lyrics while Emily and others watch from the side.

How is this new generation of young women from both sides of the aisle making their voices heard? What qualities do they prize in their leaders? And what qualities are they learning to prize in themselves?

These questions linger before they are eventually subsumed into the movie’s broader, blander portrait of female rapport and resilience. “Girls State” endears, but it also leaves viewers with the sense that, for a film about young women eager to take on the world’s challenges, the movie could stand to tackle a few more.

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? Emily Worthmore in a scene from “Girls State.”
APPLE TV+ Emily Worthmore in a scene from “Girls State.”

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