DIVINE SECRETS OF THE YA-YA SISTERHOOD
Rebecca Wells's 1997 bestseller translates surprisingly well to the screen
under the hand of director Callie Khouri (who wrote the screenplay for
Thelma & Louise). This estrogen-addled tale follows four fast-aging
friends, one of whom has a pressure-cooked relationship with her playwright
daughter. After Sidda Lee Walker (a monotone, pouty Sandra Bullock) talks too
much to Time about her screwed-up childhood, all hell breaks loose on
the home front. Only mom's crew of friends, named the Ya-Yas, a curious
holdover from a fake-ethnic childhood club, can save the situation. They
highjack Sidda Lee and clue her in on the back story to the insanity of her
mother, Vivi (the elegant Ellen Burstyn), while an old keepsake album takes the
girls back and forth between the past and the present, between emotionally
charged memories and therapeutic resolution.
Impulsive, irascible, impetuous, and insane, this quartet of Southern women
clink glasses so deftly, they make alcoholism look chic. The Golden
Girls meets The Prince of Tides meets Steel Magnolias in this
mix of cocktails, clichés, gray hairs, and breakdowns. Unfortunately,
the repetition of the chant "YA-YA!!" at every climactic turn becomes a sappy
mantra that could kill the buzz this film dishes with its fraught relationships
between mom and daughter and tight-knit friends. Ya? At the Apple Valley,
Entertainment, Flagship, Hoyts, Opera House, Showcase, and Tri-Boro
cinemas.
Issue Date: June 7 - 13, 2002
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