RIDING IN CARS WITH BOYS
If the movie version of Beverly Donofrio's memoir is to be believed, she's
lived the most thwarted life this side of It's a Wonderful Life's George
Bailey. Aching to escape her small Connecticut town for New York, go to
college, and become a writer, the movie's Beverly (Drew Barrymore) finds her
dreams quashed at every turn, always because some man betrays her or lets her
down. (It's like a Lifetime TV-movie without the tasteful Pottery Barn
furnishings.) Impregnated at age 15, she marries Ray, the feckless father
(Steve Zahn, playing another puppyish mook), but she frequently neglects her
son to study or spend time with best friend Fay (scene stealer Brittany
Murphy). Little Jason understandably resents mom, who ultimately throws out the
dad he loves -- Ray may be a junkie, but at least he's a fun guy. Beverly
finally achieves her goals (though the movie doesn't show us how), but she and
her family still have issues to settle.
Beverly is not a conventionally likable character, and Barrymore plays her with
a minimum of her usual adorableness. Credit should probably go to producer
James L. Brooks, whose film career (from Terms of Endearment to As
Good As It Gets) has been spent making audiences weep for unlikable
characters. Screenwriter Morgan Upton Ward didn't show such an aptitude in A
Pyromaniac's Love Story, his only previous credit. Director Penny Marshall
even tones down her sit-com-bred tendencies toward shtick and uncomplicated
emotions, at least until she sentimentally ties up all the loose ends in the
last 15 minutes. We're left with a standard Hollywood
you-can-do-anything-if-you-want-it-badly-enough message when everything we've
seen so far suggests that all plans are futile, all children inevitably become
their parents, and only an unseen miracle from Clarence the Angel could have
helped Beverly escape her lot. At the Entertainment, Hoyts Providence 16,
Opera House, Showcase, and Tri-Boro cinemas.
Issue Date: October 19 - 25, 2001
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