Riding in Cars with Boys Movie Review
Riding in Cars with Boys Review

"Riding in Cars with Boys" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Penny MarshallProducer : Julie Ansell,James L. Brooks,Laurence Mark,Richard Sakai
Screenwiter : Morgan Upton Ward
Starring : Drew Barrymore,Sara Gilbert,Steve Zahn,Brittany Murphy,James Woods,Adam Garcia
Chick flicks can be hard to watch. I’ll admit it: It was painful to sit
through Beaches. Steel Magnolias was a trial. As a man, even as one who
prides himself on being fairly sensitive, there’s something almost disturbing
about watching films that beg for audience waterworks. In short, don’t set me
up for an emotional episode. If it’s going to happen, let it happen; don’t
lead me down a fiery path to tearjerker destruction.
Riding in Cars with Boys follows the life of Beverly Hasek (Drew Barrymore) as
she takes up the difficult role of motherhood at the age of 15, while at the
same time, never giving up her dreams. And, while a quintessential chick
flick, Riding in Cars chooses to take a higher road -- a genuine road, filled
with life lessons so real you can feel them burning their way down your throat
and tugging at that little place inside you that says, “Hey, this could have
been me!”
But Riding in Cars with Boys isn’t about some obsessive single mother’s quest
to build a better life. It’s about people coping with the impossible. It's
proof that even the best of people can’t always do the right thing. Barrymore
is mostly capable in her role as a struggling teenage mother -- and
subsequently mother of an adult and damaged child. Yet it’s Steve Zahn, in a
supporting role as her husband, who really shines as the loving yet incapable
father of Beverly’s son. Zahn’s character Ray is such a tragic figure, a good
man of limited intelligence and even more limited means that his story alone
could fill hours of genuine filmmaking. For no matter how much he loves his
son, and no matter how much he loves his wife... he just can’t get it right.
This is not a film simply trading on moments of tragedy though. There is a
strength and cohesiveness to its story that is uncommon in today’s quick-cut
Hollywood world. Flowing between flashback and flash-forward, Riding in Cars
sticks tightly together in a smoothly crafted progression, bringing revelation
and surprise along for the ride. And in between moments of satisfaction and
amazement, you’ll find lovely bits of laughter. Even the most sincere film
needs a little joy.
Women will flock to see Riding in Cars with Boys; nothing I say here will
change that. Even in the screening I attended, the theater was packed with
'em. Mothers, daughters, sisters, and their friends, crying and hugging and
feeling along with each other as only women can do in such a communal
situation. And I, a lone man in a sea of womanhood, could easily have drowned
in the overflowing ocean of estrogen-soaked tears and giggling feminine
laughter. Men, do not despair! Though Riding in Cars is a guaranteed estrogen
magnet, there is more here than just an opportunity to pick up weak-minded
chicks. Man or woman, anyone can identify with these characters and these
lives.
It's rare to see a film that so brings to life the minds and hearts of real
characters in the real world without artificially begging for audience
response. Here is a film in which emotion happens as a consequence of reality,
not as an attempt to suck young women into theatres. I for one plan to embrace
it.
Okay, no cars, no boys.
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Review by Joshua Tyler
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