Logo
ISSUE #34.05 • SCREEN • REVIEW
[SCREEN]

Juno

Recently in "Screen"

November 25th, 2009
Brew Views • Top 5 Movies To Watch In Theater Pubs This Week:0 comments

November 25th, 2009
The Road | Here’s your future—it’s gonna have cannibals.0 comments

November 25th, 2009
Vulpining Away | Wes Anderson’s new film is just like his other films: It’s great.0 comments

November 18th, 2009
Brew Views • Top 5 Movies To Watch In Theater Pubs This Week:0 comments

November 18th, 2009
The Blind Side | Sandra Bullock makes an offensive tackle.3 comments

November 18th, 2009
Big Trouble | Precious is a raw story of survival. But it forgets the survivor.2 comments

November 11th, 2009
Brew Views • Top 5 Movies To Watch In Theater Pubs This Week:0 comments

November 11th, 2009
Pirate Radio | The movie that sank.1 comment

November 11th, 2009
2012 | Roland Emmerich to earth: Drop dead.0 comments

November 11th, 2009
Oil And Groundwater | The director of Blair Witch 2 finds real horror in the amazon.0 comments


Ellen Page (left) and Olivia Thirlby
BY AARON MESH | 503-243-2122

[December 12th, 2007]

Thirty minutes into Juno , and it looks like the movie and its heroine are both in serious danger of being smothered by their own knowingness. A 16-year-old bundle of sass in a pint-sized package, Juno McGuff has responded to her unplanned pregnancy with all the guff befitting her name. As written in Diablo Cody’s debut script and performed by Ellen Page, Juno handles all crises with a string of pre-emptive verbal strikes—caustic one-liners that must have looked like immaculate repartee on Cody’s page, but play like the patter of someone who has been watching Ghost World and practicing Thora Birch’s part in front of the mirror. “Hi, I’m calling to procure a hasty abortion,” she fires into her plastic-hamburger phone after dialing the number for Women Now, a family-planning center she has selected “because they help women, now.”

The fact that abortion is mentioned—and that it arrives as Juno’s primary option—marks director Jason Reitman’s movie as the tough-minded comedic alternative to this summer’s Knocked Up . It’s certainly true that Cody’s strong-woman writing is a welcome corrective to the dude-centric vision of Judd Apatow’s crew. (It has become perfunctory for reviews of Juno to mention that Cody is a former stripper and phone-sex operator, which I believe makes her a neo-neo-neo-neo-feminist.) But while the women in Knocked Up could be sounding boards for Seth Rogen’s improvisation, they certainly were never as glib as Juno is in deciding to carry her baby to term and hand it over to a yuppie couple (Jennifer Garner and Jason Bateman) who have advertised their desire to adopt in the local PennySaver newspaper. (She dismisses abortion fairly swiftly, after disliking the atmosphere of the clinic and learning from a nearby protester that her baby “has fingernails.”) This setup is as improbable as it is self-consciously clever, and it threatens to derail Juno in the suburbs of a little town called Sundance.













icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

All of which is to say that I walked into Juno expecting to love it (it’s an Arrested Development reunion, after all, what with Michael Cera playing Paulie Bleeker, the boy who very passively puts the bun in Juno’s oven), and halfway through was beginning to think I didn’t care for it very much. But the film soldiers on, and develops a gravity to match its gravidity. The movie is carried for a long stretch on the sheer conviction of Ellen Page’s performance; even when her lines sound false, the fear and uncertainty in her eyes is authentic and lovable. And then, much like that third pregnancy comedy of the year, Waitress , Juno turns on a heroine’s choice—between two men, who offer very different paths. Bateman plays the potential adoptive dad as a case of, well, arrested development, a man who still pines for his rock ’n’ roll glory days and takes the impending birth even less seriously than Juno does. Then there’s bewildered, loyal Bleeker—another inspired Cera creation, this time with the nervous smile erased by decency and concern.

As these two fellows reveal their true intentions, the movie’s patter slows to allow uncertainty and then warmth to slip in. Juno eventually describes herself (still sarcastically, but with a note of need) as “out dealing with things way beyond my maturity level,” and that confession rings in a third act that makes all the tough talk seem like the prelude to the discovery of real life. Juno —the girl and the movie—become wonderful when they admit how little they really know. PG-13.

SEE IT: Juno opens Friday at Fox Tower.

 

Rate This Story
5 average/3 votes

 
read all 1 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Juno”

1

Oh please... I saw this movie on Xmas day. this story is wraped up in a nice package with bow on top. No reality. God help us if young girls think all will be Great once they find themself PG. this f...

Sally, Jan 5th, 2008 6:28pm
 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
December 31st 1969Washington State | The Canada of Oregon has it all—a Stonehenge replica, a longboarder's concrete wet dream and dark, damp underground lava caves. Vive les rocks.
December 31st 1969Oregon's Outer Edges | Crater Lake. Hell's Canyon. Wallowa and Steens mountain ranges. Hell, yeah.
December 31st 1969Central Oregon/High Desert | No rain, plenty of snow, obsidian flows and great local beer. The folks from the real eastside know how to unbend outside.
December 31st 1969Great Cascades/Columbia Gorge | With plenty of room to roam—and hot springs for your weary feet—it's the place to ramble and relax for the weekend.
December 31st 1969Willamette Valley | Monks, tracks, tubing and wine make the fertile strip a virile place to play.
December 31st 1969Stumptown | Tons of public parks, an extinct volcano and nude beach volleyball to keep you jolly. Get out and collect those merit badges, without leaving the city.
December 31st 1969The Coast | The beaches are public. You own them. Go play—hike in the old-growth forests.
December 31st 1969Cycle Tour 101: Your on-bike guide to Highway 101 | To ride the greatest bike route in Oregon, you need to get out of Portland.
December 31st 1969Doggin' It | What happens when a Portland running club jogs with pooches from the pound?
December 31st 1969Over the Edge | Sam Drevo will paddle yr ass.