Beautiful Girls Movie Review
Beautiful Girls Review

"Beautiful Girls" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Ted DemmeProducer : Cary Woods
Screenwiter : Scott Rosenberg
Starring Matt Dillon, Annabeth Gish, Lauren Holly, Rosie Odonnell, Martha Plimpton, Natalie Portman, Michael Rapaport, Mira Sorvino, Uma Thurman
With a cryptic title like Beautiful Girls, one starts to wonder to whom this
film is being marketed. Is it the frat boy model-ogling crowd? Is it a
self-help flick for teenage girls? Is it soft porn? The answer, of course, is
none of these: Beautiful Girls is a date movie, and quite a good one at that.
Something like The Big Chill meets Generation X, Beautiful Girls is one of
those ensemble character movies that really defies description in terms of plot
points. The ostensible main character is Willie (Timothy Hutton), who is
ambivalent about girlfriend Tracy (Annabeth Gish) so heads back home to
Knight's Ridge, Massachusetts to sort things out during his 10-year high school
reunion. Here, he hooks up with old pals Tommy (Matt Dillon) and Paul (Michael
Rapaport), each of whom is also flailing helplessly in his own romantic mess.
The "beautiful girls" in question include Sharon (Mighty Aphrodite's Mira
Sorvino), Tommy's girlfriend, and Darian (Lauren Holly), Tommy's other
girlfriend. Jan (Martha Plimpton) is Paul's seven-year-long lover, who's now
dating the local butcher. Then there's the visiting heartbreaker Andera (Uma
Thurman) and 13-year-old "heartbreaker-in-training" Marty (Natalie Portman).
And don't forget a special appearance by "Elle Macpherson"...Paul's Saint
Bernard.
The entanglements of the some 17 major cast members could fill pages and would
spoil the film. Suffice it to say that they are mostly very funny and
realistic to boot. After an awkward and confusing start, Beautiful Girls
really hits hard as a comedy and a romance without becoming mushy and stilted
like your average twentysomething date flick. And even more incredible is that
director Ted Demme and writer Scott Rosenberg have managed to imbue every
character with life and originality, something many filmmakers have trouble
doing with just one or two.
The acting is all top-notch, including the big surprise of Rosie O'Donnell's
best 10 minutes of her career, playing the local beautician. The young Portman
is just fantastic, and Hutton also brings some real emotion to his role
(hopefully this will revive his career).
And in case you're used to my crusty opinions and think I'm being rough, my
guest insisted Beautiful Girls was one of the best films she'd ever seen.
Regardless, even if we're both overestimating this picture, it's still worth a
look.
Holly goes lightly.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





