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The Runaways starring Kristen Stewart and Dakota Fanning

Movie is at its best when working out contradictions

There's an obvious stunt element to the casting of The Runaways: a punked-up, barely legal Kristen Stewart and a still underage, barely dressed Dakota Fanning begging for street cred by playing dress-up as, respectively, Joan Jett and Cherie Currie, front girls of the oversexed '70s proto-punk sensation the Runaways. Watch sweet little Dakota strut around in a corset! Look at the chick from Twilight kissing girls and snorting massive amounts of coke! But under the stylish direction of Floria Sigismondi, what may be a stunt is also a movie worth taking seriously.

The Runaways' rallying cry—"I want an orgasm!": Kristen Stewart (left) Dakota Fanning
courtesy of Apparition Films
The Runaways' rallying cry—"I want an orgasm!": Kristen Stewart (left) Dakota Fanning

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The Runaways
directed by Floria Sigismondi
area theaters, starts Friday

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The film opens in 1975, in a dystopic L.A. floating between the Manson murders and the Polanski rape case. Brought together by charismatic weirdo/record producer Kim Fowley (Michael Shannon), the girls develop a "product" based on "women's libido" in place of women's lib. Cherie and Joan become fast friends while drinking vile blends of pilfered booze under a decaying Hollywood sign, Joan the tomboy Clyde to Cherie's glam Bonnie. With "I want an orgasm!" as their Fowley-dictated rallying cry, the pushing-16-year-olds sell the notion that they're full of cum; young and dumb, it takes them a while to figure out the dark side of hawking their sexual curiosity.

Jett is the first to wise up. When the band turns on Cherie for submitting to a solo soft-core photo shoot, it's because Joan understands that unless they set the terms of their own sexual empowerment, and its commoditization, then what's really happening is exploitation. "You could say 'no,'" she tells Cherie. It's a shock to the blonde; it's also the thesis of the film.

Jett's unique blend of allure and threat, apathy and determination, gets a mumbling, hyper-naturalized take from Stewart—more Brando than Bella Swan. Her performance is largely internal—risky, considering that her built-in Twilight audience might not know what to make of a character with so much going on in her head. Fanning tacks the other way, bravely embracing the physicality of her role but unable to nail its emotional complexities. (In other words, Stewart's performance makes you forget the baggage of her celebrity; Fanning's foregrounds it.)

The girl-on-girl kiss at the center of the film shocks for the simple fact that it's not gratuitous. Cherie and Joan's attraction is less about sex than about teenage emulation—they want to be each other more than they want to be together. Its consummation, like all of The Runaways' most vivid sequences, allows Sigismondi to show off her music-video-honed knack for creating deep wells of feeling without dialogue.

Sigismondi creates mood out of chiaroscuro lighting, elliptic editing, and well-chosen source cues, but actually saying something is harder. All that artsy, abstracted imagery is hung on the skeleton of a predictable rock movie—wide-eyed rise leads to free fall, which leads to rebirth and redemption—and that's fine. In The RunawaysÕ first hour, thereÕs a visceral pleasure in riding waves of rock-movie cliché spiked with socio-sexual commentary. The movie is at its best when working through the contradictions of teen sex for sale, both turn-on and creep-out. And Sigismondi's nearly avant-garde visual choices elevate what would be junk food into something more. It's only when she abandons the usual forward motion of a rock biopic that the film runs into trouble.

The Runaways didn't sing slow songs, and after taking so much tonal inspiration from the music, Sigismondi falters in choking the film down to ballad-speed. After defining Cherie and Joan as two halves of the same whole, Sigismondi loses her way when the girls' personal problems tear them apart. As the director follows each on her quest to move on without the other, sloggy crosscutting ensues. Joan gradually adopts a modicum of self-control, ditches the druggy hangers-on, and gets to work smoking and mumbling vague snatches of potential lyrics in the bath, while Cherie spirals through drunken public meltdowns into the ultimate embarrassment: a straight job. This drowsy spell snaps when Jett is apparently struck by divine inspiration to cover "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" while jumping up and down on a bed in her panties. Sigismondi returns to the rock cliché that fueled the best stretches of The Runaways, but she junks the visual daring and feminist questioning. It's sexy, but in the end skin deep. 

 
  • john 03/27/2010 5:52:00 AM

    I'm sorry but "stunt casting" element to the movie? Since when is casting two respected, well-known actors who, in one case at least, have played a wide variety of roles in their career, in roles that are dead-on or within a few years (slightly younger for Stewart) of their own "stunt casting?" It's not. Explain what "stunt" is involved please. I think you live in an alternate universe and it's one defined by a writer wanting to find an angle to write a story, so they manufacture one out of a lack of creativity or insight otherwise to get the job done. Stunt casting might involve casting adults, males, teenage girls who are known as musical artists already, the real Runaways themselves, etc. Stewart and Fanning playing the roles to a high degree of simulacrum is not stunt casting.

  • Emma 03/17/2010 2:54:00 AM

    Great review, the best I have read so far. The movie has , however, one positive , STRONG accent. Regardless to what happened in the past the real artists are still alive and well. They are wise women, they did not disintegrated as humans. That make the movie almost romantic (sic) Joking, but there is an optimistic undertone to it: you can pick yourself up , stand up and live. If it were a post mortem movie I would not watch it. Come prepare to see it. Meet the real musicians. Read or watch a piece of an interview. It is raw, real and SHOULD be watched by young people. I would lower the rating to 15. Thanks to Kristen Stewart�s infamous hair cut she has been showing for the past year , the movie got free promotions(how else a small project like this gets funds for commercials ) . The band is immortalized now in the eyes and ears, if not hearts of a younger generation. Thanks Kristen for strategically borrowing your stardom, you are a sponsor of the film. Not by acting( I am sure it is fine) but by simply the hair cut , that caused so much hate, uproar towards that young actress. I never heard of The Runaways until I followed the comments about Kristen�s infamous mullet hair in the middle of making the huge blockbuster The Twilight. Now my 10 year old knows who The Runaways are. It is spring time, rebirth for the band. If they are still playing the young audience is ready. How one generation helps another, fantastic. Oh, the movie poster? Piece of art itself! No exploitations of actors. Sensual. I hope it will get special recognitions if there are any in that category. Who design it? Let�s give the artist due credit.

 

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