But I'm a Cheerleader Movie Review
But I'm a Cheerleader Review

"But I'm a Cheerleader" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Jamie BabbitProducer : Leanna Creel,Alexis Magagni-Seely,Andrea Sperling
Screenwiter : Brian Wayne Peterson
Starring : Natasha Lyonne,Cathy Moriarty,Bud Cort,Mink Stole,RuPaul,Clea DuVall,Eddie Cibrian,Joel Michaely,Julie Delpy,Michelle Williams,Melanie Lynskey,Richard Moll,Katharine Towne,Brandt Willie
Take director John Waters and give him a really good actress like Natasha
Lyonne, a paltry budget of, say, $1 million, and ask him to make a satire about
a "gay rehab camp," and you might come up with something like But I'm a
Cheerleader.
Then again, Waters might have come up with something funny, like Pecker. With
such a meaty topic as Family Values ripe for a send-up, you'd think it would be
easy to milk Cheerleader for comic value. Unfortunately, first-time feature
director Jamie Babbit (whose few credits including directing the MTV series
Undressed and acting as script supervisor on The Game) doesn't appear to have
much ability behind the camera, which becomes painfully apparent after only a
few minutes.
The story follows Megan (Lyonne), a high school cheerleader who wrestles with
lesbian tendencies. She dreams of women's thighs while her boyfriend
tongue-bathes her. She even has a Melissa Etheridge poster. Naturally, mom
and dad want this gayness nipped in the bud, so they call in "True Directions,"
a homosexual-rehab group run by Mary Brown (Cathy Moriarty) that resembles 28
Days detox-center crossed with a McDonald's kiddie play area.
Everything at True Directions is cast in hot pink or baby blue (to let the
recruits empathize with their gender), and exercises consist of learning to
vacuum (ladies) and chopping wood (guys). Naturally, there are
self-affirmations and admissions of homosexuality -- all part of the road to
healing.
In the clink, Megan meets rough-and-tumble lesbian Graham (Clea DuVall, looking
to make a career out of playing rough-and-tumble lesbian types), and naturally
they fall in love. Will they run off together and become societal outcasts or
will they graduate? Well, you need only wait about 75 zippy minutes to find
out.
But I'm a Cheerleader plays a lot like a sitcom, only not a very funny one.
(Perhaps a laugh track would have helped?) The addition of good actors like
Melanie Lynskey (Heavenly Creatures) and Michelle Williams (Halloween: H20) is
far outweighed by using yesterday's pop-culture jokes like RuPaul (not in
drag!), Mink Stole, and especially Moriarty. The editing, directing, and
cinematography don't help, either. (Have fun while you watch: see how many
times you can count the boom microphone drifting into frame!) The result is a
haphazardly constructed mess that's totally off when it comes to comedic
timing, and essentially unable to muster even the tiniest bit of sympathy for
any of its cast, even if True Directions-style places really do exist.
But perhaps the most egregious error is casting Natasha Lyonne as a cheerleader
. Lesbian, yes. Cheerleader, no. Lyonne strikes me as more of a band girl.
Oh right -- I almost forgot -- it's supposed to be a satire.
But the audience is bored.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





