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JUNO 3 Stars – Insightful For those who love authentic, well-written dialogue with straightforward
honesty
that
is
presented
by
engaging
actors
with
nuanced
directing,
then
Jason
Reitman’s
“Juno”
is
a
film
not
to
be
missed. Written by the brilliant if incorrigible Diablo
Cody
(whose
real
name
is
Brook
Busey,
the
author
of
Candy
Girl:
A
Year
in
the
Life
of
an
Unlikely
Stripper
in
which
she
chronicles
her
year
in
“the
sleaziest”
of
Minneapolis
strip
clubs),
the
lead
character
of
the
film
embodies
her
wit
and
frank
approach
to
life
within
an
engagingly
eccentric
personality. Juno MacGuff (Ellen Page) is a sixteen-year-old
junior
in
high
school.
The
child
of
divorced
parents,
she
lives
in
Minneapolis
with
her
father,
Mac
(J.K.
Simmons),
stepmother
Bren
(Allison
Janey)
and
her
little
sister
Liberty
Bell
(Sierra
Pitkin).
Disarming
the
audience
with
her
witty
and
concise
complexity,
Juno
explains
that
“everything
began
with
a
chair.”
It
was
on
a
chair
that
she
had
her
first
sexual
experience
with
Paulie
Bleeker
(Michael
Cera),
the
lanky
track
star
who
received
her
advances
with
gratitude. This singular event created a child. Though the film is not a message
film
about
pregnancy,
abortion,
adoption,
divorce
or
forgiveness,
the
journey
Juno
takes
through
all
of
these
issues
explores
the
realities
of
life
in
both
its
sorrows
and
its
graces.
As
in
any
well-told
tale,
this
comedy
has
us
laughing
with
Juno
as
she
faces
realities
that
are,
as
she
explains,
“far
beyond
my
maturity
level.” But as we are laughing, we are also living
the
realities
of
the
decisions
she
makes
because
they
become
our
own.
As Juno and her best friend, Leah (Olivia Thirlby)
approach
her
pregnancy
with
the
naiveté
of
teens
who
are
exposed
to
far
more
knowledge
than
they
are
emotionally
or
spiritually
ready
to
handle,
we
identify
with
them
and
experience
how
this
event
does
in
fact
mature
us
all. That is not to say that the film
is
full
of
social
or
spiritual
guidance.
Mac
and
Bren,
as
Juno’s
father
and
stepmother,
seem
as
overwhelmed
by
what
has
happened
as
their
daughter
is,
and
there
is
no
one
else
in
their
lives
who
comes
alongside
them
to
provide
wise
counsel. But they accept Juno completely and demonstrate their love for her
by
walking
with
her
through
the
entire
experience. They actively protect her dignity and they
share
in
the
joy
of
new
life
being
born.
Their
terms
of
endearment
shift
as
their
relationship
with
her
changes
and
all
adapt
to
the
choices
she
makes. Although the film downplays the
social
stigma
a
pregnant
teen
experiences,
it
does
not
avoid
the
challenges. It is not a film promoting or discouraging
teen
sex,
abortion,
adoption
or
divorce.
It
is
simply
a
tale
that
allows
us
to
walk
with
a
young
woman
through
her
experience
and
find
grace
and
forgiveness
within
it. That is a walk worth taking.
Discussion:
________________ Cinema In Focus is a social and spiritual movie commentary.
Hal
Conklin
is
former
mayor
of
Santa
Barbara
and
Denny
Wayman
is
pastor
of
the
Free
Methodist
Church.
For
more
reviews:
http://www.cinemainfocus.com.
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