
Hick, 2011
Luli (Chloe Grace Moretz) lives in a small town in Nebraska with an alcoholic father and an indifferent mother. After a bizarre 13th birthday party in which she’s gifted a revolver, Luli decides to run away. She first hitches a ride with Eddie (Eddie Redmayne), who seems both contemptuous of Luli and attracted to her. She later ends up traveling with Glenda (Blake Lively), but ends up crossing paths with Eddie again. As Luli gets increasingly enmeshed with the messy personal lives of Glenda and Eddie, she finds herself in more danger than she ever imagined.
Overly written characters and an uncomfortable fetishizing of its main character makes this a labored and icky watch.
There were so many times during this film that I found myself sighing deeply, just wondering who thought that what was happening on screen was in any way good or acceptable. I usually like to start reviews with the positive, but there’s sadly almost nothing to praise here. All of the actors---in addition to the main cast we’ve got Juliette Lewis, Anson Mount, etc--are people I associate with being talented. And you get the sense in the film that the actors are trying.
But again, you can SENSE that they are trying. This whole movie consists of watching the actors fight the script, trying to make the writing sound like something that would come out of the mouth of any real human being. Moretz gets the worst of it. Luli is a person who exists in the imagination of someone who has never spoken to a teenager or something? It’s not just that she speaks like an adult, but that she speaks like a scripted adult. Moretz throws a revolving door of actor-isms at the script--take a drink every time she sighs, bites her lip, or pauses meaningfully in the middle of a line, you’ll be dead before she meets Lively’s character--and it honestly made me vicariously embarrassed. The other actors fare a bit better, but no one gets away unscathed.
But the worst part of the film is the way that it overtly sexualizes its barely-teenage protagonist. There’s an extended sequence in the beginning of the film where she walks around in her underwear--again, this is a 13-year old child--and the camera slinks around her body, shooting her from these low or side-on angles. It’s just pervy. Moretz was 13 when the movie was made, and it boggles my mind that anyone thought it was appropriate to film her this way. There’s literally a montage of her admiring herself in the mirror and saying quotes from classic films. It’s not that a teenage girl wouldn’t look at herself in the mirror, but the way it’s filmed and how long the scene lasts made me outright uncomfortable. And what adds insult to injury is that the film gets most of its suspense out of placing her in danger of sexual assault or sexual exploitation. It feels grossly hypocritical to say the least.
Really, though, the overarching problem with this film is that it doesn’t have a point or a compelling arc. The characters are so over-written that they never feel real. This isn’t some slice-of-life. The pacing and flatness of the characters means that it’s not a road-trip romp. The main character doesn’t learn any lesson more profound than “a strange man who follows you around might not be a nice person.” And the dialogue is so painful that these overheard conversations would have been better off missed.
Insufferable. Points for the actors’ efforts.