Stick It Movie Review
Stick It Review

"Stick It" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Jessica BendingerProducer : Gail Lyon
Screenwiter : Jessica Bendinger
Starring : Jeff Bridges,Missy Peregrym,Vanessa Lengies,Gia Carides,Julie Warner,John Patrick Amedori,Jon Gries,Nikki SooHoo,Kellan Lutz
Just to set something straight: Bring It On is awesome. It’s spectacular. But
not in any way that implies actual quality, more for a spastic camp appeal that
makes it a perfect Sunday afternoon tacos-and-ice-cream hangover cure
accompaniment. However, we already have Bring It On, and it's on basic cable 17
times a day. We don’t need another one, as it’s already been brought.
And yet, Stick It.
Whether we asked for it or not, we get Bring Gymnastics On, and it is
tragically just its predecessor, only without a lot of the charm and cheese
appeal. It’s all about Haley (Missy Peregrym), a top-notch athlete who shocked
the gymnastics world and totally screwed over her teammates by quitting the
sport in the middle of the World Championships in order to fully dedicate
herself to being a smart-mouth, dirt-biking hoodlum, complete with every
Ramones tee/graffiti-covered room/baggy capri-wearing cliché available from the
Poser Punk catalog.
After inflicting some serious property damage, she’s sentenced, as Texas courts
are apparently able to do, to go to a gymnastics training school for some
tough-love coaching. The saddest thing of all is that Jeff Bridges has sunk low
enough to be the one delivering crusty, sage truths over a balance beam (Has it
really come to this? Don’t those Duracell voice-overs save you from fates like
this, Jeff?) and try to reign in Haley’s aggressive, rule-breaking ways before
she either breaks her neck or starts to corrupt the other girls into having
personalities of their own.
Stick It is your basic life-lessons-through-sports rigmarole, with Haley
discovering who she is through kicky floor routines and training montages. The
screenplay, by none other than Bring It On scribe Jessica Bendinger (who also
directed this one), is riddled with quippy dialogue that sounds like it was
written specifically to be punch lines in the commercials. But it obviously
clocked in somewhat shy, because the difference is made up in cheeky
directorial devices and elaborate overhead shots of colorful gymnasts in
kaleidoscope routines that really only want for Ethel Merman and a pool to be
truly retro camp.
A lot of these show-off sequences are pretty spectacular in the “human bodies
shouldn’t be capable of doing that, should they?” sense, and go a long ways
towards illustrating the jaw-dropping shape a person can be in, if she spent
six hours a day in hard training instead of more than that lounging in a comfy
theatre seat. But unfortunately, that means casting girls more for their
flexibility that acting, and man does it show. Blessedly, Peregrym is good at
“sassy,” and, well, thank God Bridges’ career has come to this, because he made
my 105 minutes markedly more bearable.
The problem is that they all take it so damn seriously. This is, after all,
shots of girls spraying stuff on their butts so leotards don’t ride up and
stage moms with Olympic gold in their eyes. These are pretty young actresses
racking themselves, violently and repeatedly. What is that if not inherently
entertaining? But Stick It isn’t hyper and irreverent and vaguely surreal
enough to give it the deliciously awful feel it could cultivate. It doesn’t
have to be good, but it’s not quite enough fun to be worth it, either. And it’s
hard to really root for the spunky underdog when the villain is cast as the
entire system of gymnastics judging. It’s so vague and nitpicky that it’s hard
to get into a broad buck the system message.
We in the audience are either squealing tween girls or hung-over older ones. We
don’t want anti-establishment, damn-the-man rebellion so much as rah-rah girl
power in a spangly leotard. Bring that on, and we’ll talk.
Several sticking choices.
Reviewer: Anne Gilbert





