‘Mona Lisa’ smiles but you may not
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ALLEN MACDONALD
The title refers to the ambiguous grin on the subject of Leonardo
DaVinci’s most celebrated portrait, but it also is a reference to the
theme: that 1950’s America was an oppressive time for young women,
who were increasingly besieged by pressure at home and in the media
to be the perfect, happy housewife whose sole reason for existing was
to be a pillar of support for her hard-working man. To be submissive.
To sacrifice her own dreams to help realize those of her male
counterpart. However, many of these women had dreams of their own,
and they were forced to “smile” on the surface when inside they felt
nothing but pain. It’s an ironic metaphor since this is a movie that
on the surface seems promising -- it’s beautifully shot, edited and
acted -- but its gorgeous exterior conceals an empty heart.
Julia Roberts plays Katherine Watson, a new art teacher at the
prestigious Wellesley school for girls in Massachusetts. She arrives
to the campus hoping to make a difference in the lives of some of the
most brilliant female minds in the country. That’s exactly what she
finds: Girls who pursue a college education, then immediately
squander it by giving into the social pressure to marry well and
start a family. At first, the girls are ready to eat Katherine alive,
but she soon is inspiring them to think for themselves. As if there
was any doubt. When at first the girls pride themselves at memorizing
art pieces and the accepted (“by the right people”) interpretations
of them, Katherine challenges them to come up with their own opinions
and fight for them.
And this is the most infuriating thing about “Mona Lisa Smile”: it
purports to be controversial and thought-provoking when it’s actually
about as safe, non-offending and politically correct as you can get.
It’s two-hours-plus of platitudes.
As hard as the first-rate cast tries to fill out their characters,
their cliched origins cut them off at the knees: Giselle Levy (the
magnificent Maggie Gyllenhaal) is the promiscuous one with a penchant
for her male faculty members. She also can’t seem to stretch her
blood alcohol as high as she’d like. Giselle does these things, as we
later find out, because her parents got divorced after World War II
ended -- her soldier father came back a stranger and took it out on
everyone. Joan Brandwyn (Julia Stiles) is a brilliant young woman
who’s torn between her ambitions to attend Yale Law School and her
desire to have a family. Amanda Armstrong (Juliet Stevenson) is the
“pretty ugly girl,” which means she’s gorgeous, but in the world of a
Hollywood movie, she’s the unattractive one because she’s 15 pounds
heavier than the other girls. And finally, there’s Betty Warren
(Kirsten Dunst), whose brutal honesty and cruel nature is really a
defense mechanism against the deep-rooted fears about pleasing her
brutally honest and cruel mother. At her mother’s behest, Betty has
bought into the homemaker fantasy, married while still in college,
but soon finds herself in a loveless marriage with an apathetic,
philandering husband. Betty’s killer instinct makes her dangerous,
and she’s used her weekly newspaper column to end more than one
faculty career. This makes Betty a natural adversary to Katherine,
which lets the audience know that the person who most needs
Katherine’s help will be the one she may be unable to reach.
The main problem is the script: It isn’t bad, but it’s uninspired.
And this is material that needs to be inspiring. What you get instead
is a movie that is trying too hard, and when I feel my buttons
getting pushed I become detached and simply don’t care. You know when
the writers are setting up a plot twist, and you can pretty much
guess what that twist will be. A screenplay needs to be organic and
natural. The material needs to be ripe for the cast to bring it to
life. Instead, the plot machinations are exposed and obvious -- you
see the story machine working -- which detaches you when you should
be absorbed.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 30, recently earned a master’s in screenwriting
from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
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