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Juno Movie Review
Juno Review
"Juno" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Jason ReitmanProducer : Lianne Halfon,John Malkovich,Russell Smith,Mason Novick
Screenwiter : Diablo Cody
Starring : Ellen Page,Michael Cera,Jason Bateman,Jennifer Garner,J.K. Simmons,Allison Janney,Olivia Thirlby
Ellen Page plays a quirky teenager in Jason Reitman's Juno but she does so in a
way I've rarely witnessed before. She's not rebelling from medication like
Natalie Portman in Garden State, nor is she just a normal, shy girl who is
externally quirky like Tina Majorino in Napoleon Dynamite. Her peculiarities
aren't her definition like Ally Sheedy in The Breakfast Club, and she's not
flippantly cute and brazenly poetic like Zooey Deschanel in Paul Gordon Green's
All the Real Girls. Page's Juno MacGuff certainly has hints of all these
characters, but what we witness of her comes from somewhere far off-screen.
Remarkably, the world we're watching doesn't revolve around her.
When this Argento-loving firecracker gets knocked up by Paulie Bleeker (the
invaluable Michael Cera), her rhythms don't change much; a big cookie consumed
simultaneously with a lamb kebob seems like something she'd eat even if her
hormones weren't all akimbo. After chatting up an ex-pill popper/current
pro-lifer, her attempts to procure an abortion are thwarted by the thought of
her baby's tapping fingernails and the sterilized miasma of the clinic's
waiting room. Hastily, she opts for an old-fashioned, at-birth adoption with no
frills. Her parents, played lovingly by J.K. Simmons and Allison Janney, are
concerned but surprisingly level-headed, even if they wished she had just
gotten a DUI instead of getting knocked up.
The mother-to-be finds the ideal parents-to-be in the local Pennysaver paper,
charmed by the legitimacy of their picture. (They didn't use a fake
background.) The adoptive mother, Vanessa Loring (Jennifer Garner), says she
feels like she was born to be a mother but her husband Mark (Jason Bateman)
shows hesitancy from the first "sure." They act happy but he digs Sonic Youth,
Herschell Gordon Lewis, and his cherry Les Paul while she tries to explain the
importance of a Pilates machine to Juno's father.
Not surprisingly, Reitman showed the same cavalier adeptness to comedy as his
father in last year's grossly overrated Thank You for Smoking though he showed
little else as a filmmaker. Second time's a charm: maybe it's Diablo Cody's
witty and honest script, or maybe it's just momentum, but Reitman feels more
mature and assured of his assets in Juno than even Smoking's most ardent fans
could have anticipated. Considering his genes, it comes as a particular shock
how he works with actors and how he gets them to hit notes that seem to be
otherwise unreachable by the cast.
Reitman's new abilities are never more apparent than when Juno finds out that
the Lorings might be divorcing and that Paulie has chosen to go to prom with a
girl who smells like soup. One might think a girl who refers to penises as
"pork swords" and listens to Patti Smith and Iggy Pop exclusively would be able
to handle these blows, but it's no slice of meringue. Cera has a natural
earnestness when he tells Juno that she's being unfair and immature, but when
Page says "I'm a planet," you can feel the weight of the room shift.
From the outset, Page all but merges with Juno, and her punchy one-liners and
peculiar contortions really come from her gut rather than a typed page. By the
time our heroine's water breaks, Reitman has transformed her early
idiosyncrasies into an eccentric but sincere tenderness that radiates in the
cast. Janney, donning wonderfully cheesy sweaters throughout, delivers the most
heartfelt of Cody's lines when answering how Garner looks with her baby: "Like
a new mom: scared shitless."
The fact that Juno goes for adoption rather than the other "a" has caused a few
critics to cast the film as a conservatives-go-hip ploy. That doesn't fly for
me: Almost every character exudes notably blue-state warmth, and though the
American family is seen as a dilapidated structure, it's whole-heartedly
embraced for its flaws without a hint of chastisement. But sometimes these
films don't have to be about the "right" and "wrong" attitudes towards dubious
issues nor even about what agenda the helmer may or may not be after. Sometimes
they are simply about finding the right cheese for your macaroni.
It's a girl.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin
i loved this movie, think you should go and see it! oh and use the 2 for one vouchers
on offer on www.7digital.com/thescore, theyre really good for this movie!
THIS MOVIE ROCKS!. im sure that everyone should watch this movie. its super cute.
i know everyline :)
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