The Lizzie McGuire
Movie
review by
Cynthia Fuchs,
2 May 2003
Better Than One
In 1999, Jim Fall directed Trick, featuring a
dear, campy bit by Tori Spelling. The following year, he directed
TV's Grosse Pointe, a campy love letter to Aaron Spelling's
primetime soaps. Whether this one-two punch was a coincidence or
not, it makes clear that the man has certain predilections, among
them, a contagious delight in glorious affectation.
Now, he's
directed Lizzie McGuire's transition from her enormously popular
Disney TV series to her likely-to-do-just-fine Disney movie. Their
pairing is more productive than you might imagine, but mostly, it's
vaguely perverse (though not enough that any Lizzie fan or her
parents will be troubled). Lizzie (the near-painfully adorable
Hilary Duff, who showed up at a premiere with the equally pretty
Aaron Carter) is perfectly straight, as stereotypically next-door
dreamy as any girl could be, she has a bit of excess about her. In
the sitcom, this is made visible in her alter-ego, Animated Lizzie,
who says what's on her mind, even as Live Lizzie smiles, bites her
lip and scrunches her nose, and smiles some more.
The movie
doubles this doubleness. When fifteen-year-old Lizzie goes to Rome
on a school trip, she meets a much-adored Italian pop star named
Isabella (also played by Duff, with dark wig and Italiana accenta).
At first, Isabella appropriately appears only on billboards, as
fantasy to be gazed on by Lizzie and her classmates, primarily nice
boy Gordo (Adam Lamberg) and mean (or maybe just competitive) girl
Kate (Ashlie Brillault). Miranda (Lalaine) apparently couldn't make
it for the movie, though Lizzie and Gordo mention her name and
status -- as Lizzie's "girl best friend" -- before they board the
plane and never look back.
On that plane
and again in Rome, the kids engage in repeated
running-time-expanding montages, in which Lizzie and whoever look up
at the sights and smile, little takes of beaming faces accompanied
by a pop tune. While these sequences offer a few touristy glimpses
of Roman scenery, they helpfully underline the film's
raison
d'être,
to showcase Duff's high-voltage appeal and admirable enthusiasm.
This is made
clear as soon as Lizzie steps foot outside the hotel, and is
mistaken for Isabella by excited fans. At this moment, Lizzie plays
both fan (of a star she's not yet heard sing) and star, an
admittedly odd duality she handles with smiley aplomb. She's aided
in the fan part when she meets Isabella's singing partner, the
so-cute-he-might-break Paolo (Yani Gellman). Struck by the
similarity in appearance between Lizzie and his absent collaborator,
he convinces her to sneak off from her group to meet him at the
Trevi Fountain. Eventually, he lets drop the other shoe: he needs a
replacement for Isabella at the International Music Video Awards.
His reason is fishy from jump (Isabella's on an island, the company
will sue if they don't appear), and continues to mutate over the
next few days. Lizzie, an endearingly gullible girl looking for
adventure in Rome, believes him. And so, her adventure begins.
The bulk of
this flimsy film focuses on 1) Lizzie's pretense of illness in front
of chaperone Miss Ungermeyer (Alex Borstein, weirdly channeling
Christian Slater); 2) efforts by Lizzie's truly annoying little
brother, Matt (Jake Thomas), to thwart her good time, from way back
in the States, where he monitors her activities on his iBook; and 3)
Lizzie's ecstatic moments with Paolo, as he drives her from monument
to outdoor market to fireworks on his motorbike, usually in montage
format, with a bouncy beat on the soundtrack (my favorite was
Vitamin C's weak cover of "Volare"). Lizzie is relentlessly charming
throughout, even as she somehow misses Gordo's obvious misery at her
distractedness.
The movie gives
her all kinds of reasons to be so distracted. Paolo's suggestion
that Lizzie can be a pop star, even for a night, surely accommodates
lots of girls' dreams. Tween Queen Duff makes this work because, for
all her celebrity as Lizzie, she yet resembles a more or less
"regular" girl, incarnating a healthy mix of sincerity and
giddiness, fandom and stardom. Lizzie's first appearance in the
movie named for her conveys this mix: while Matt surreptitiously
videotapes her (so your view of her seems somehow "furtive"), she
bounces along in a corny lip-sync performance with her hairbrush s
mic, bobbing her head to the beat of "The Tide is High (Get the
Feeling)." Charismatic and amateurish as any tweeny girl might be,
she's a far cry from a similar scene in Crossroads, where
Britney lip-syncs to Madonna (somehow, Britney doesn't look like an
amateur, though she tries really, really hard).
Lizzie's lack
of expertise -- her notoriously appealing clumsiness -- makes her
efforts to perform like a pop star doubly delightful (at least in
the eyes of her fans, the eyes that count). She stumbles, she
giggles, she revels in her own ordinariness. Lizzie beams her way
through a learning-the-dance-steps montage, as well as a more
elaborate dress-up sequence. Here, Lizzie pretends to be Isabella at
an outrageously grandiose dress designer's studio. The designer
sniffs at her "new" appearance ("She looks like a school girl!"),
but goes along, as do the numerous assistants who feed her pastries
and juices on silver trays, while poofing her hair and applying
makeup to her perfect features.
And Lizzie/Duff
is wonderfully game, teetering down a runway in a series of in an
increasingly bizarre series of dresses -- an inflatable igloo
number, one that lights up, and another getup where she literally
wears a tabloid magazine on her head. After surviving all this,
under Taylor Dayne's cover of "Supermodel," Lizzie emerges suddenly
confident. "Goodbye Lizzie McGuire, hello Fabulous!" she exults, as
if there's a difference between the two.
This crazy
campy bit is only the precursor for the film's most lunatic moment,
when Lizzie, as she must, meets Isabella. Returning from her
"island" at film's end, Isabella tossing her ringlets and flaunting
her nutty accenta, embraces Lizzie as someone she can trust like her
own self (which, of course, she can). The split screen gimmick and
the blond-brunette face-off may recall (for the parents of targeted
viewers) the wildly campy confrontations between Samantha and Serena
in Bewitched or Jeannie and Evil Jeannie in I Dream of
Jeannie. But here the close encounter -- Duff meets Duff -- is
not about catty fighting or subterfuge. Here it's all about
self-love and girl bonding. This results in The Lizzie McGuire
Movie's most plainly delirious and multiple doublemint moment, a
poppy romantic duet called "What Dreams Are Made Of." Who needs
Animated Lizzie when you can sing and dance with yourself and, even
better, give yourself a hug? |
Directed
by:
Jim Fall
Starring:
Hilary Duff
Adam Lamberg
Hallie Todd
Robert Carradine
Jake Thomas
Ashlie Brillault
Alex Borstein
Yani Gellman
Written
by:
Susan Estelle Jansen
Ed Decter
John J. Strauss
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
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