Friday, August 26, 2016

Movie break (Quick Vu/Summer Lite): An old story that was retro in 2003, and embraced by a more-retro-loving modern audience: Freaky Friday (2003)

Lindsay Lohan’s and Jamie Curtis’ performances remain the real justification for this fun time-killer

Thirteenth in a series: Post-9/11 Blues, Internet-infected Brave New World: A revisiting of 2001-10 pop (and political) culture

Subsections below:
A happenstance introduction
A start of the major phase of Lohan’s career
An impressionistic measure: old times, versus…
Looking at things more fine-grained, including postulated music
The lead actresses redeem the show
Side characters happen to be a range of less-than-superhero males
A dose of Disney racism


You ask, “What is he up to now? Why this film?”

I had wanted to do a Lindsay Lohan film for some time, though the reason (mainly giving credit to someone who’s sadly become a punchline for some years) may seem quite frivolous. But then, people might get tired of my “heavy weather” blog entries: “Not another chunky brief about some political morass or personal ‘Russian-prison-literature’ story! Why can’t we have Pop Rocks? Simple pleasures?”

Of course, for those in the U.S. who view the country, as it is seemingly changing, through Donald Trumpian eyes, and lament how “Every day, you seem to find someone else ‘has joined the other team,’ and you don’t know which team they’re on, and you [who aren’t on that same team] don’t know which bathroom you should go to anymore,” a story about old-fashioned family tensions, kids’ dreams, a fantasy story-twist, and a heartwarming ending may be just the ticket. (This while some country songwriter may release a single titled “Should I Hold On Till I Get Home?”)

This film, indeed, seems to speak of “another, simpler time,” which might seem all the starker today, with pictures of bloody kids in Syria and reports of a haystack-haired character, running for high-level U.S. office, whose duck lips are again flapping like a tattered flag in a stiff wind. Freaky Friday was a kids’ novel by Mary Rodgers published in the early 1970s, before libraries and booksellers carved out a huge category—with candy-colored covers and library-cataloguing “YA” markers on book spines—of young adult, fantasy, and sci-fi works that seem as big among youth today as record albums were for teens in the 1970s. Freaky was first made into a film in 1977 (a glimpse of it on the 2003-film DVD suggests it was pretty cheaply made), with Barbara Harris as the mother and Jodie Foster, still a kid, as the daughter.

I think a way to look at the 2003 version, as it is regarded today, is like Tin Pan Alley–inspired rock music of the 1960s (think Paul McCartney in his more old-timey in the 1960s, or Tiny Tim in parts of his album of ~1968, God Bless Tiny Tim)—and let’s try to make the analogy digestible:

* The McCartney music was a “set of retro clothes” (derived from 1920s-30s styles) to put on in the 1960s…

* (this corresponds to how, in 2003, Freaky, of 1970s vintage, seemed when remade in 2003)

* and still later, in the 1970s (or later), the retro-in-’60s music was embraced, in however sympathetic a way (despite its being “retro”), by young rock fans like me (even if the McCartney vaudeville stuff could seem a bit embarrassing at times)…

* (this would correspond to how Freaky, out in 2003, seems to be enshrined today).


A happenstance introduction

In 2003 Freaky Friday came out in remade form, this time with Jamie Lee Curtis as the mother and Lindsay Lohan as the daughter. At the time I was going to movies in theaters quite a lot—I did that habitually from 1999 to about 2006, when I had more disposable income in my pocket—and I was familiar with Lindsay Lohan only in a cursory way, as having been in something called The Parent Trap (1998), also a Disney remake as is the 2003 film under review. Freaky Friday was released in what is usually the summer “fallow” release period for films, August. Still, it ended up a huge hit.

I saw it early in the month (August 2003), I believe, and I definitely saw it again that year, in very-late August just before Labor Day, in a situation that helps anchor my “nest of reasons” for focusing on this film: I was in the midst of helping pseudonymous Betty, the woman who is the elder-female focus of my memoir A College Try that Courted Trouble, and Betty would have (with the essential aid of an attorney who specialized in such cases) a restraining-order hearing against her husband of eight months, in September 2003, in which hearing I served as one of two witnesses. This enormously complicated hearing—three hours long, and built up to over weeks in September (amid several postponements)—would be a major factual anchor for A College Try.

But also, my dealings with Betty were such that more than one fairly conventional support-group exponent (or frequent attendee) with whom I had friendly dealings would suggest or imply that I was taking a chance (or wasting energy) in dealing with Betty as I was (the full memoir explains how this was a truly nuanced, believable situation). But in my pragmatic (and patient) mode with Betty, I felt there was little other choice, or I made what decent choices I felt were mine to make (especially with what came out in the restraining-order hearing, multiple times she had gotten the police involved with her partner-then-husband). In late August 2003, it was a simple walkabout matter of consequence of this many-months situation that I happened to be with her; now we were somewhat desultorily hanging around in the Ledgewood Mall area in Morris County, N.J., when to kill time (I would have to go back to records to explain precisely how this developed), we went into a cool movie theater on the hot day and watched Freaky Friday.

(Incidentally, as precipitously or graspingly as other minor entanglements were invoked in that restraining order hearing [not least concerning a few of Betty’s female friends of the time], this movie-watching episode was not touched on at all, because Betty’s husband didn’t know about it. By the way, one of the big issues Betty’s husband made just before the September 2003 restraining order period was that, as he alleged, she had had an affair with her ex-husband [first husband] when they took their [Betty’s and her first husband’s] son to college around Labor Day. Yes, things in her life got that crazy, and then some.)

This second watching of Freaky in 2003 I might not have done if not with Betty and wondering which film to see. It seemed appropriately light to help Betty take her mind off some grim stuff she was engrossed in at the moment.

Betty thought Lindsay Lohan’s character Anna was as she, Betty, had been as a teen. (A little wild or mouthy, was the implication, I guess.)


A start of the major phase of Lohan’s career

Meanwhile, my viewing of this film twice in 2003, and maybe not only this, left me with the impression that Lohan was a rising star, and indeed she would end up as probably the most talked-about film actress of her generation for about four years from 2003 to 2007. In fact, Freaky Friday was something of a film comeback for Lohan—who was about 16 when she made it—after her last “hit” in The Parent Trap, and Freaky seemed to get her the notice that led to a string of films marketed as including her starring in them for the next four-or-so years. (She had started as a model at age three—obviously begun in this career by coddling parents—and had been in one or more TV productions as a kid.)

Perhaps the film most cited in a thumbnail sketch of her career has been Mean Girls (2004), where she plays the “good girl” who ingenuously works herself into the clique of mean princesses who “lord it over” others in their high school, something of a repeat of part of the Heathers (1989) story scheme. Mean Girls was written by Tina Fey, another rising star in films (as a screenwriter) at the time.

Lohan would appear in such Disney fare as a follow-up to the old Herbie the Love Bug films (she would have been born many years after the last of these had been in the theater). That film-theme was so old that I had a toy Herbie in about 1970, and had long lost it (or disposed of it) by the time I was in high school in the late 1970s. Lohan would also appear in adult things like A Prairie Home Companion (2006), the last film made by Robert Altman, which adapted the Garrison Keillor radio show.

Then by early 2007 Lohan started to make lurid unfavorable headlines with her drug problems, and her film career got to the point that, in about mid-2007, Jack Nicholson and other actors set up a sort of boycott where they refused to be in a film deal with Lohan, because she was so unreliable about turning up on the set on time. Since about 2007, Lohan has not really been the golden star she was for the years just before, though she occasionally turns up in things, like the shlock parody Machete (2010) and something rather odd directed by Paul Schrader in about 2013. She even appeared as a guest actress on TV’s 2 Broke Girls in 2014 or 2015, with her husky voice and playing a fairly forgettable character as a bride-to-be who couldn’t make up her mind about what she wanted for her wedding from the confectionery run by the characters played by Kat Dennings and Beth Behrs.

My point isn’t to belabor Lohan’s declined career, but to note she was a profitable proposition for a few years during the Bush II Administration. Freaky Friday was her first major hit as a teen-heading-to-twenty star. And that film itself was an old-fashioned Disney fantasy of sorts, though it seems today securely enshrined (perhaps as a precious artifact, for some) in the canon of the fantasy/sci-fi constituency.


An impressionistic measure: old times, versus…

Seeing Freaky today reminds me of “old times”—for one thing, 2003 and associating with Betty, and when films somehow had more of an innocence-and-pluck about them than they do today. Also, Freaky struck me when I first saw it (e.g., in how shots were composed) as made rather off-hand, and yet effective in its comedy. Today, I’m struck by its adept way of being put together, even if it seems a little cheaply made by, say, huge-Disney-hit standards. The producer was Andrew Gunn, and the director Mark Waters.

As written for 2003 (by Heather Hach and Leslie Dixon), it has a lot of corny premises and jokes (and occasional physical slapstick, and canned lines like the resolving “Let’s do this!”), but it usually works well enough as basic entertainment, and works especially well in the performances of Curtis and Lohan as the mother and daughter who, due to a kind of magic wrought by a Chinese restaurateur, supernaturally exchange places—their minds/“souls” end up in each other’s bodies—and they thus have an opportunity to “see what it’s like being in the other’s shoes” until such time as they learn a life-affirming lesson, and their minds then supernaturally go back to their original bodies.

This may sound like cornball stuff, but it’s a fun romp for a summer period that might otherwise seem a seasonal limbo before (say, if we look at just 2016) Labor Day comes and (groan) the presidential race gets into high gear. And, as I said, Curtis’ and Lohan’s performances are quite good. Lohan is especially good, with her aping of a “middle-aged mom’s” gestures and vocal tones. She shows why she seemed quite the promising young talent for some years.


Looking at things more fine-grained, including postulated music

I enjoyed re-watching this film the first time this month (August 2016), even if the worn DVD had skips toward the end, starting when there is rapprochement between mother and daughter and the spell is removed. I remembered enough of the film from 2003 that these skips didn’t matter much in following the story (especially when it was at its more banal/mawkish), though that kind of skipping usually disturbs me a lot when I watch DVDs.

Watching this film a second time this month, and parts a third-or-so time, left me feeling this was a better film for 16-year-olds up to about college age maybe, than for old codgers like me who (among many other, more warmhearted pursuits) enjoy throwing verbal darts at fish-in-a-barrel Donald Trump. Those whose lives are close to a “peak experience” with Bubble Yum, Pop Rocks, and that kind of sneakers that are augmented with flickering lights (OK, maybe I’m sketching/imputing an age-group too young for this film), and gossip during lunchtime at school, may feel this film stands up well on multiple viewings. But for me it is a lot of fun the first time, and looks quite shallow a second time. Maybe that’s a function partially of my current income-related doldrums.

Anna Coleman, played by Lohan, is a girl of about 16, “stressing out” over schoolwork and boys; she’s one of those concoctions of movies of this type, a mid-teens girl going through a rebellious phase; with blond streaks in her red hair, Lohan looks a bit like the smart girl indulging in some rebellious “cross-currents.” And she is a bandmate (in a rock band called Pink Slip) with two other peer-age girls, played by Christina Vidal [URL 1; see URL list at end of entry] and Haley Hudson [URL 2], both of whom have a “garage rock-group” look, Vidal with rainbow-colored streaks in her frizzy hair, and Hudson with a sort of goth/Tim Burton–esque look, pale face and dark shock of chopped-off straight, black hair. (By the way, marketing mavens: note the trio of type of hero-sylphs: bonhomie-rich girl “of color,” “white girl with black hair,” and “white girl with red hair (with blond streaks),” the latter a substitute for a purely blond girl.)

The music they play, which is first sampled in the Colemans’ garage, is a sort of semi-punk hard rock, which when featuring the female voices sounds a lot like Joan Jett and the Blackhearts. (There are also two male players, who comprise the rhythm section—drums and bass. They actually look like they’d appear in such a band—at least, a generic high school rock group.) The song they rehearse, which later is a “familiarized” basis for the film’s edge-of-our-seats performing climax, is something apparently titled “On and On and On,” with the ponderous, somewhat pompous manner of classic semi-metal hard rock, here made rather “generic” so it wouldn’t be a ripoff of any real song (I presume), but with enough hooks to keep us interested. (I don’t think I’m alone is saying this song is more interesting than the actual, earnest single Lohan lead-sings at the end of the film, which strikes me as more forgettable today than it must have in 2003.)

Anna, as the putative star bandmate, is one of the guitarists (in the band, Vidal seems to alternate between being a lead singer and singer/guitarist; Hudson also plays a guitarist [legs widely splayed like a seasoned “ax-man’s”] and sings backup; all three girls have guitars when they appear in the perform-to-playback video segment at film’s end, the type of thing that would get some more jaded audience members getting up to leave, not wanting to stay for this, as they’d call it, self-indulgent marketing move centering on Lohan, who was nurturing a career as a recording artist anyway).

Within the film’s story, Anna is supposedly the one who delivers the steaming guitar solo (one of the film’s few close-to-mock-worthy lines is, from Hudson’s character to Anna [in a moment before they are close to even being on stage], “You rock harder than anyone I know!”—and if you can embrace a film that has values like that—we all, for this film, can momentarily self-lobotomize if we enjoyed rock growing up—then you won’t squirm watching this film [another line is Hudson’s character’s assurance to Anna, when her mom is (unknown to Hudson) in Anna’s body, “We’ll still love you even if it [the guitar break] blows!”]).

The big climax of the film, in terms of Anna’s more idealistic “career aims,” is when, with her body still inhabiting her mom’s spirit/mind, she is awkwardly on stage as the band is supposed to do well in this contest-type show to qualify for [whatever], and how is she going to “deliver the rock ’n’ roll,” as the estimable Keith Richards would say (there is even a Richards-related joke, of a less-respectful type, shortly before this point), when it is Anna’s noodgy mom in her body?

But saints be praised, Anna, in her mom’s body, is off to the side behind the curtains on the stage, playing a guitar that is plugged in to an amplifier, and steaming guitar break (not one to embarrass her bandmates) is heartily delivered at the right time—with stage-located Anna’s body/mom’s mind, helpfully coordinating, amateurishly aping playing the guitar. The ruse isn’t detected; the crowd, roused (and maybe pretty soused), cheers to the heroics of the climactic guitar break. All is well, for the moment.

If you allow this kind of climax-of-sorts, this film is a good summer Saturday treat.


The lead actresses redeem the show

As I’ve suggested, when Curtis as “mom’s body with Anna inside” and Lohan as “Anna’s body with mom inside” are front and center doing their thing, they are far and away the most entertaining parts of this film. There’s something about an actor “in a role playing someone other than his/her normal character”—a sort of “meta” acting stunt—that can be very entertaining when done well.

Lohan with her cherub-like face—she seems to straddle being a girl and young adult in appearance here (looking here more girlish to me today than she did in 2003)—is remarkable for emoting (when she is Anna) in a teen’s hair-trigger moment-by-moment way, and (when she’s mom Tess) aping a “humorlessly prim mother,” showing what a talent Lohan impressed people as in those days. She would only improve on this status in films released in the next few years (she would also be a rare actress of her generation who seemed to convey arresting charisma in both performances and in still photos). (I didn’t care for her appearing in her music-video bit at the end of Freaky; I couldn’t, in general, understand why promising actresses had to show they could sing, too. This wasn’t necessary for me. Less objectionably, Evan Rachel Wood did singing in Across the Universe [2007], when she sung one or two Beatles songs—the film was essentially a celebration of that group’s work. [I actually liked that film, and I’m a pretty particular Beatles fan.])

Lohan’s acting chops can be seen—in addition to Anna’s more standard, heated head-butting moments with Curtis as her mom—when the family is at the Chinese restaurant, seated around the table, and Anna is being “surly,” or whatever her mother assesses her as. There are further exchanges, leading to when Anna gets into a surprising conciliatory mode that her mother interprets, rightly, as representing that Anna foxily has a sort of big favor to ask. But amid this, notice how, at one or more points, Lohan has a sort of mixed-emotions look about her, which seems so right to the moment: her eyes, as she reads the menu and is semi-stewing amid the exchanges, seem angry-and-ironic, yet there is also a sort of bemusement about her face. She isn’t just being an impossible brat; there is something more resourceful and emotionally humored about her. You wonder how much of this was a function of (for Lohan the actress) multiple takes and the director guiding her, or how much a function of short sleep, or whatever. But it helps show how Lohan can be a vivid presence in articulating emotions for a part. We see it in other of her better films, too.

Curtis here, with short hair, has that sort of vaguely “butch” look that she has often had in recent years (you kind of mischievously think of a sort of party game: get a photo of Curtis of recent years, with her close-cropped hair, and put it side by side with a photo of her father Tony Curtis from Some Like It Hot [1959]—and will you start having a gender-bending-related freakout?). She seems to be having fun “being Anna in her mother’s body” in this film, including getting mischievous digs in at Anna’s younger brother Harry, played by Ryan Malgarini [URL 3].

By the way, Curtis’ Tess is a psychologist by profession, going about her life with a personal digital assistant (those have gone by the board, with the advent of smartphones, haven’t they?), and other ways she is plugged in to the modern day’s frenetic, tech-enabled go-go life. She has, among others less pathetic, a needy client in Evan, who is a classic midbrow-stereotype basket case of a psych client, good for cheap movie laughs and little more.

One could also comment in this connection on the wider relevance, or the conceptual way that a wider discussion can be worked up, in the Tess/Anna relationship, which seems inherently “built for conflict”—such as the mother, a psychologist no less, who presumably has a fairly rigid, conventionalized way of assessing human behavior, and the semi-rebellious mid-teens daughter who is “breaking bounds” as a matter of growing up. The mother, not just by virtue of her professional training, is defined by a conceptual schema in her way of understanding the child in a way that inherently leads to clashes with how her child wants to be understood and accepted. (This is assuming the mother isn’t, herself, starkly dysfunctional.) This all could lead to a discussion of the daughter as a possible case of borderline personality disorder (with the mother possibly mildly narcissistic), but this film seems enough aimed to keeping things on a harmless-fun level that I won’t go further along these lines here.


Side characters happen to be a range of less-than-superhero males

Other characters are Ryan, Tess’s fiancé (her first husband died, making this film a blessedly unusual one where the “broken home” is due to the death of a parent, not a divorce—the sort of thing that would have been an oasis of “rare forgiving culture” in the wider pop culture of the 1970s and 1980s when I [and maybe you] could have used a little more understanding of growing up without a father). Ryan is played by Mark Harmon [URL 4], at the time an actor whom I remembered as a sort of stolid Disney all-American “boy next-door,” somewhat on a par with Ken Berry (remember him?). Harmon, who looks here a bit like Tom Cruise’s older brother, has of course appeared in CBS’s NCIS TV show since 2003—which show I have never seen, but seen advertised on TV many times.

Grandpa—he of the bad hearing, and limited eyesight (and hence good for a range of jokes tied to those disabilities)—is played by Harold Gould [URL 5].

Harry (Malgarini) is the classic moppet, a small, cute-faced kid who is precocious with some of his reactions, remarks, etc., even when some of his values are of the ilk of uninhibitedly eating some sweet out of a container with friends before dinner.

There is also a noodgy English teacher who “has it in” for Anna, apparently because he resented a long-ago snub from Tess when he and Tess were classmates. This teacher, Mr. Bates, is played by Stephen Tobolowsky [URL 6].

Not least among the side characters is Jake (Chad Michael Murray [URL 7]), the boy (older and with two non-school jobs) who has an eye for Anna (as she does him), who gets swept up in supernaturally-induced plot complications when he falls for the spirited spice of who he thinks is Anna’s mother, when the mom’s body has Anna inside it. Meanwhile, Anna’s body with the mother’s frosty personality turns him off. There is thus a sort of “mistaken-identity/romantic-attraction” subplot that reminds me vaguely of something in the more risque Victor/Victoria (1982), directed by Blake Edwards.


A dose of Disney racism

Perhaps one of the more objectionable-type characters are the two Chinese restaurant workers, the older of whom (the mom) casts the spell over Tess and Anna, with the aid of little more than fortune cookies and some incantation in untranslated Chinese (hmm, amazing how resourceful the Chinese are—from massively building a state under Mao to manning factories like Dickensian workers in more recent years, and then this casting-a-spell stuff…). (The spell could be removed in line with the fortune cookie inscription—and you thought these were just churned-out pop-psych slag—with the message including “then selfless love will change you back.”)

(Seriously, I am charmed by Chinese restaurants, or at least I used to go to them a lot more than in very recent years. My favorite, which I still go to when I can, is a place called Peking House on Route 23 in Butler, N.J., which I think has been there since 1980, though I only started going to it in 2003. The female among the couple who owns it, Vivien [sp?] as she is known, is very friendly to me and my mother [when my mother accompanies me there], though I’m sure Vivien fully performs as the friendly small-business owner to the tons of more-local people who patronize that restaurant. The Chinese “ethos” of, in a service-industry capacity, being obsequious and “wanting to serve”—which some of Vivien’s underworkers have done more than she has—can strike me as embarrassing, as I wasn’t brought up to be “waited on” in an old-time, servants-to-rich-folk way. But Vivien, when schmoozing with customers, also has a familiar [if broken-English] service-industry manner that is echoed in the daughter in this Freaky film in no miniscule way. So the depictions of restaurateurs here aren’t entirely “fantastic.” But I think there is enough of a stereotypic quality here that I offer my qualms.)

The daughter is played by Rosalind Chao [URL 8], and the mother by Lucille Soong [URL 9]. In case you thought these characters amounted to Disney taking a “rare misstep” in terms of “political correctness,” actually, Disney racism, if you want to routinely call it that, has been part of its game for many decades. Since the company always aimed at “middle middle class,” you could say, ethnic stereotypes—with no malice intended—were always a marketing staple.

As long ago as Fantasia (1940), I think it was, there was a segment of two mushrooms looking like stereotyped robed Chinese doing a dance, or such. The film Song of the South (1946), based on Uncle Remusstories, featuring the song “Zippetty Doo-Dah” (which should be quite familiar to many), was derived from a sort of “trustworthy property” (Joel Chandler Harrisstories) to make a film of; but today, it would seem quite racist regarding Blacks, almost like the old Amos ’n’ Andy stuff.

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