‘13 Going On 30’ is a cutesy film
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VAN NOVACK
“13 Going On 30” is not the kind of movie that will send me running
for a Thesaurus because I’m about to run out of descriptive
phraseology. I believe I could fashion an effective review of this
film using only two adjectives: “cute” and “nice.”
As the title suggests, the film opens in 1987 on the 13th birthday
of Jenna Rink (Christa B. Allen). Jenna desperately wants to be
popular to the exclusion of all else, including the obvious puppy
love of her chubby neighbor Matt. Personifying 1980s, junior high
school cool is the “six chicks” led by acidly conceited and
precocious Lucy (inexplicably nicknamed Tom Tom). Without going into
gruesome detail, Jenna encounters some magic wish dust and wakes up
17 years later as the impossibly stylish editor of her favorite New
York fashion magazine, “Poise.”
Jenna, now played by Jennifer Garner, is basically a little girl
in a woman’s body and has no memory of the intervening 17 years.
Waking up in her antiseptically avant-garde Manhattan apartment with
her moronic professional hockey-player boyfriend, Jenna eventually
comprehends what has occurred. Looking for a familiar face, she
tracks down her old friend Matt, now a moderately successful
professional photographer.
As it turns out, Jenna and Matt have not been friends since that
fateful 13th birthday party. Jenna turned her back on Matt, family
and old friends shortly after for reasons explained in the movie.
Jenna got her wish to be popular, even becoming one of the “six
chicks” after which she seemingly led a life of hedonistic
superficiality. The infamous Tom Tom is now one of her fellow editors
at Poise magazine and is a friend of sorts.
As with all “child in an adult body” movies (“Big,” “Vice Versa,”
“Freaky Friday,” etc.), “13 Going On 30” contains several awkward
moments when the “child” is put in “adult” situations. Conversely, it
also features formulaic scenes where the exuberant child reminds the
adult how to have fun or returns them to the simplicity of childhood.
Mark Ruffalo plays the mature Matt as just a decent guy
understandably confused by the life-disrupting reappearance of his
childhood crush. New York offers a picturesque backdrop for the story
and the fashion magazine angle allows Garner to parade about in one
ultra-chic outfit after another.
Surprisingly, this familiar stew actually cooks up pretty well
thanks in no small part to Jennifer Garner’s unaffected and charming
portrayal of Jenna. Garner is beautiful, but not in an off-putting
way. To put it simply, Garner’s Jenna is just plain likable and you
find yourself cheering her on as she attempts to sort out the mess
her selfishness has wrought.
“13 Going On 30” may be the cinematic version of light cuisine.
Nonetheless, if you want 97 minutes of “cute” and “nice”
entertainment, this movie is just the ticket.
* VAN NOVACK, 50, is the director of institutional research at Cal
State Long Beach and lives in Huntington Beach with his wife
Elizabeth.
‘Fire’ is cliff-hanging excitement and fun
Cliffhangers put heroes on the teetering edge of life and death.
The danger in such situations is self-evident. It’s Sylvester
Stallone hanging on by his fingertips to a rope strung over a rocky
ravine or Indiana Jones running to save himself from being crushed by
a rolling boulder. “Man on Fire” is a cliffhanger, too, but with a
difference.
Creasy, played by Denzel Washington, is at the end of his rope and
clinging to life. It’s unclear what Creasy has done before, but his
belief that even God could not forgive his past actions along with
his excessive drinking and other suicidal tendencies, lets the
audience know that he is no longer the man he once was. Creasy
believes he has good reason to self destruct. He’s given up looking
for a reason to live.
The reason to live, however, finds him in the form of Pita, a
little girl Creasy is hired to protect from kidnappers. Their
evolving relationship comes to have a life-reaffirming effect on him.
But it’s short-lived. An unspeakable turn of events steers Creasy
back into his own private descent in to hell. This time, however, he
doesn’t choose the bottle for solace or put a gun to his temple. This
time Creasy goes for revenge.
Washington has carved out a niche playing flawed and damaged
heroes such as Alonzo in “Training Day.” His characters are
believable, which makes them come alive. Initially you don’t know
what to make of Creasy . Is he the good guy or the bad guy? It’s hard
to tell if he’s a wounded hero who will heal or a fallen hero at the
end of his days. The uncertainty keeps the audience guessing about
Creasy until the film’s climax, with plenty of surprising story
developments in between.
Director Tony Scott (“Top Gun,” “Spy Game”) and Washington have
worked together on another character-driven film, “Crimson Tide.”
Tony Scott’s definition of “action” in a movie is pure extravagance.
For example, gun battles take place in the middle of the city in
broad daylight and last for minutes without the cops ever arriving on
the scene. It happens only in the movies right? The director uses the
overly dramatic action, however, as a way to illustrate what’s going
on in Creasy’s mind. The strategy works.
Another element that works in “Man On Fire” is Creasy’s best
friend, Ray Burn, played by Christopher Walken. They share the same
past, but, Ray copes and lives with his inability to atone for his
past sins in a way that sets him apart from Creasy. . The audience
has a sense that the friends have survived many battles before, but
the last battle is proving nearly impossible to recover from.
Saving the best for last, Dakota Fanning as Pita ranks with
Natalie Wood and Jodie Foster as a child actor. It’s easy to forget
it’s only a movie because her acting is so good. It’s like watching a
home movie of someone comfortable in front of the camera. Fanning
makes Pita so real and so charismatic that it’s understandable why
Creasy reacts the way he does.
“Man On Fire” shows heroes at some of their weakest and worst
moments as well as their strongest and best moments. For Creasy it
comes down to a sum of all his actions, down to his last one in the
movie. It’s a cliffhanger worth the price of admission.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 40, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
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