Penelope Movie Review
Penelope Review
"Penelope" Overview

Rating: PG
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Mark PalanskyProducer : Reese Witherspoon,Scott Steindorff,Jennifer Simpson
Screenwiter : Leslie Caveny
Starring : Christina Ricci,James McAvoy,Catherine O'Hara,Peter Dinklage,Richard E. Grant,Reese Witherspoon
Make no mistake: Penelope is a fairy tale. I mention this at the outset because the
filmmakers do too, appearing almost desperate to point it out as often and early
as possible. The movie begins, for example, with a "once upon a time" title card,
in case the story of a girl born with a pig's nose due to a gypsy's curse that can
only be undone by true love is mistaken for another movie about Iraq.
Christina Ricci plays Penelope, the besnouted girl. Ricci is comfortable in fantasy
from her work with Tim Burton and Barry Sonnenfeld (and, for that matter, Vincent
Gallo), but Penelope lacks character beyond idle fairy-tale outlines, and Ricci regresses
, coming off a good decade younger than she is and trading in her otherworldly spark
for generic adolescence -- something she rarely did as an actual adolescent.
Penelope's rich family wants to marry her off to an equally rich suitor in hopes
of breaking the spell; cut to lots of exaggerated takes of men running screaming
from Penelope's mild disfigurement. The first one to stick around for any measure
of time is Max (James McAvoy). McAvoy's raffish but nonthreatening charm makes him
a good fit, just short of a bland Prince Charming. The screenplay adheres so strenuously
to bad romantic formula, though, that he and Ricci must be driven apart as soon as
they start to seem like a good couple. So Penelope runs from Max, escapes her overbearing
family, and sets out to explore the real world -- which in this case is a bizarre
Euro-American hybrid.
There is some fun in watching Ricci's big, inquisitive eyes take in the half-baked
sights. But the movie's whimsy has already begun to seem arbitrary: Amidst this cross-bred
fantasy world with no short supply of U.K. voices, genuine Scot McAvoy is inexplicably forced
to don a flat American accent. It's a small detail, to be sure, but emblematic for
a movie that seems not to know its strengths. Take its use of Catherine O'Hara: She
can be hilarious in conjunction with good writing (or even good outlines, as in the
Christopher Guest films), but defaults to shrillness so easily, as is the case here
in her scenes as Penelope's high-strung, status-conscious mother.
But, the movie would surely like to point out again, this is a fairy tale, which
may be the attempted excuse for its sheer number of sputtering and/or manic performances.
One exception is Reese Witherspoon, also a producer on the project, and pasted in
as a tough biker chick who strikes up a friendship with Penelope. She's not convincing,
but her chumminess with Ricci is natural enough to wish -- cautiously -- that it
was a focal point rather than a cameo opportunity. As is, the agreeability of their
scenes together combined with their infrequency makes the movie feel like a buddy comedy
that Witherspoon didn't have time to finish herself.
Penelope has its heart in the right place, seeking to impart lessons about inner
beauty, loving yourself, and following your heart. It's more instructive in the ways
that genuine fairy tales can be as unimaginative as the romantic comedies that strive
to evoke them. It's only missing a scene where the heroine cries angry tears and
demands to know if that's all she is to the hero, a stupid bet. Or maybe it's not
missing. Maybe I've forgotten it already.
Who's squealing now?
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger





