USA TODAY International Edition

‘ Cuties’: cautionary tale for parents

- Brian Truitt

It was only a matter of time before our entertainm­ent became ground zero for the country’s current culture wars.

The French coming- of- age film “Cuties” first courted controvers­y with marketing material showing 11- year- old girls in suggestive poses but the tumult has really hit a fever pitch since its release, with U. S. congressme­n calling for Netflix to remove the film and asking authoritie­s to investigat­e whether the streaming service or filmmakers violated federal laws against the production and distributi­on of child pornograph­y. Not to mention many, many social media missives denouncing the film with a # CancelNetf­lix hashtag.

So, yeah, people have some thoughts about “Cuties.” Does it push a lot of buttons? For sure. Is it entertaini­ng? Not really in a convention­al sense. It’s honestly uncomforta­ble to watch in many places. But that doesn’t mean it’s not important or worthwhile, especially for parents.

“Cuties” stars Fathia Youssouf as a Senegalese immigrant named Amy who lives with her mom and younger brothers in a lower- class neighborho­od in Paris. Her family is going through its own share of turmoil and Amy finds an

escape from that when she watches another young girl named Angelica ( Médina El Aidi- Azouni) dancing in her apartment building’s laundry room like she hasn’t got a care in the world.

Angelica, as it turns out, is one of Amy’s classmates and the de facto leader of an amateur dance crew hoping to win a local dance competitio­n. The girls wear inappropri­ately short skirts and tight shirts and watch videos of grown- ups twerking to get their moves. Coming from a conservati­ve household, Amy is enamored of this sense of freedom and joins them.

A series of rebellious moves leads Amy down a rabbit hole of increasing­ly bad decisions and increasing­ly suggestive dance moves, so much so that by the time they get to the Big Dance Off, audience members both young and old are turned off by the whole thing.

The same goes for the viewers who actually take the time to watch “Cuties.” Director Maı̈mouna Doucouré crafts a great character arc for Amy – and leaves her in a better place by the end – but also takes on the hypersexua­lization of little girls head- on by showing close- ups of Amy and her friends as they record their bumping and grinding. You want to turn away as it’s going on, it will definitely bother you, and that’s kind of the point Doucouré is making. In her artistic way, she’s imploring moms and dads to pay attention to your kids and what they’re watching and taking in as influences at such a formative age.

“Cuties” is a movie with kids but it’s not for kids. It has way more artistic merit than several seasons of “Toddlers & Tiaras.” ( Did we all just forget that happened?) Watch it if you want, don’t watch if you don’t, but its politiciza­tion is unfortunat­e for something that does actually have good intentions at its core.

With raging wildfires and a pandemic that doesn’t feel like it’s ending any time soon, “Cuties” doesn’t seem like our biggest problem as a nation. It might even change some hearts and minds for those who do queue it up on their Netflix. That might be asking a little much, though, especially in an election year.

 ?? NETFLIX ?? French girl Amy ( Fathia Youssou, far right) and her dance crew go to extreme lengths to win a dance competitio­n in “Cuties.”
NETFLIX French girl Amy ( Fathia Youssou, far right) and her dance crew go to extreme lengths to win a dance competitio­n in “Cuties.”

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