Obvious Child
Dir: Gillian Robespierre
2014
***
In 2009 Gillian Robespierre made a short film
called Obvious Child. It was somewhat of a stand against what
she perceived as misrepresentation of unplanned pregnancy and abortion in
mainstream cinema. Robespierre stated at the time that she felt
"disenchanted with the representation of young women's experience with
becoming pregnant". She's got a good point
and many agreed so she decided to write and shoot a feature length version.
Jenny Slate reprises her role from the short film and, as much as I didn't
always like her character, she does a fantastic job of it. It's a tough
subject, especially within the realms of comedy because whether you
agree with abortion or not, it's just not a very nice
subject. However, it is a very normal thing, a way of life and it has been for
many hundreds of years, Robespierre and Slate really are
telling it how it is. Never is the subject treated without respect though, the
characters acknowledge and are clearly effected by the situation.
There are times where Slate's character is beyond annoying and it is very easy
to dislike her and her behaviour but this
also highlights the fact that she isn't ready for motherhood, it
wouldn't be fair on either her or her child. The message here is two mistakes
don't make a right and at the end of the day, it's no one's decision but that
of the woman in that situation. There really isn't a bad guy in
this scenario, just a very ordinary and unfortunate situation that
hundreds of thousands of people find themselves in at one point
or another. It's not great but it happens, the idea that woman use abortion as
a form of contraceptive is of course ridiculous, unwanted pregnancy
comes from a mistake both a woman and man make at the same time and it is wrong
that it is always the woman who is victimized. Obvious
Child doesn't lay blame with anyone as such, it points out a mistake, that is
all. How the main characters deal with it is rather wonderful, it may seem like
it's in the worst possibly taste but this is quite a sweet love story. Rites of
passage comes in all shapes and sizes, not only is this an intelligent
alternative to the usual mainstream nonsense but it's also a really good
exploration of change and maturity. It's a gusty film with big cojones and I
applaud it for what it stands for and what I believe it has achieved. However,
I just didn't like the humour or Jenny
Slate's character. I didn't like the fact she was a stand-up comedian, I hated
the scenes where she spat out her humourless routine to a room full of coffee
drinking cardboard cut-outs and the fact she had no money but still afforded to
live in an expensive area of Brooklyn. The strength of the film is in
its realism, this realism is almost shattered by all the
unrealistic and synthetic looking ideas. Maybe it had to be
somewhat abrasive to give the film the impact it required, and I love
what they've done, I just hated the details, which I think
were important and sadly overlooked.
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