Jennifer’s Body
Rating
Director
Karyn Kusama
Screenplay
Diablo Cody
Length
102 min.
Starring
Megan Fox, Amanda Seyfried, Johnny Simmons, Adam Brody, Sal Cortez, Ryan Levine, Juan Riedinger, Colin Askey, Chris Pratt, Juno Ruddell, Kyle Gallner, Josh Emerson, J.K. Simmons, Amy Sedaris, Cynthia Stevenson
MPAA Rating
R for sexuality, bloody violence, language and brief drug use.
Review
What do a spirited pregnant teen wrestling with putting up her child for adoption and a slutty high school girl turned psychotic vampire have in common? A screenwriter.
Diablo Cody made a name for herself when she wrote and won an Oscar for the screenplay of Jason Reitmanโs film Juno. The film became a breakaway success earning four Oscar nominations including Best Picture. Her first big screen outing since winning the Oscar is an amalgam of genre cliches mixed with her own over-exaggerated teen-girl dialogue.
In her new film, Jenniferโs Body, Amanda Seyfried and Megan Fox are almost your typical American teenagers. Fox plays Jennifer, a gorgeous cheerleader, and Seyfried plays Needy, a brainy social outcast. The only reason they are friends is that they grew up together. How did they turn out so different? Thatโs a conceit the screenplay deftly avoids. Instead, weโre further exposed to Codyโs must-be-patented banter like โYou need a mani bad. You should find a Chinese chick to buff your situation.โ When the style first showed up in Juno, audiences werenโt expecting it to be a theme of all of her productions, but just like itโs used frequently in Codyโs Showtime creation The United States of Tara, it also makes for some rather awkward moments in Jenniferโs Body.
Aside from the parlance, Jenniferโs Body has a semi-unique premise wrapped in painfully executed scenes of bloody horror and gratingly banal plot devices. Thereโs a small element of originality in Jenniferโs vampiristic inducement, but the circumstances are contrived, the progression is unrewarding and the finale is suspiciously anti-climactic.
Ms. Fox got into a lot of trouble recently for bashing the man who gave her her big break in Transformers. While many of us spend time lambasting him as a director, itโs verboten for people who are still working within the Hollywood system to do the same. With her performance in Jennfierโs Body, she has proven to no one that she can act. Barely passing for acting, Fox plays on her sexuality to distract everyone she can from the fact that she has no real talent. Perhaps thereโs a strong actor hidden somewhere under that faรงade, but if there is, sheโs doing a fantastic job keeping it hidden.
After her debut in the successful Mamma Mia!, one might expect Seyfried to have found more worthy projects. Instead, sheโs traveling the irrelevance route involving herself with the likes of Jenniferโs Body and the upcoming Dear John, films that give her play with audiences, but do little to display confidence in her own acting ability.
If youโre looking for mindless horror entertainment, there are still better films out there to watch. Jenniferโs Body has claimed itself to be a serio-comic spoof of the horror genre, attempting to extract humor from its situations while being utterly devoted to its conventions. Whatโs funny to some isnโt funny to others and while films like Scream arenโt exactly comedy films at least those arenโt relying heavily on the hip factor to sell its wares. Even the true spoofs like Scary Movie have the ability to entertain the audience far more sufficiently than this hopelessly clueless flick.
Review Written
November 10, 2009
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