Foxfire: Confessions of a Girl Gang Review
By Rich Cline
Gifted filmmaker Cantet (The Class) packs this fascinating story with vivid characters, but fails to shape the narrative into something that holds our attention. This is precision filmmaking, expertly recreating a period to adapt Joyce Carol Oates' iconic novel, but the movie is so long and meandering that it never builds up any momentum at all.
It's set in 1955, when 14-year-old Legs (Adamson) teams up with her best pal Maddy (Coseni) to form a secret society called Foxfire with their friends Rita, Goldie and Lana (Bisson, Mazerolle and Moyles). Their plan is to stick up for each other in the face of male persecution, and their first act together is to humiliate a sexist teacher. From here they get bolder, attacking Maddy's abusive uncle and waging war on the school bullies. Then a run-in with the law leaves Legs locked up in a girls' home. When she gets out, she rents a farmhouse where they can live together, but the money runs short so they start indulging in petty crimes. Then they plan an audacious kidnapping.
Cantet stages all of this so adeptly that it feels like a true story, complete with random details about the situations and characters. And since these girls all come from broken homes and struggle against gender inequality, we root for them to succeed. To a point. It's one thing to corner a predatory man; it's another to prey on someone who is completely innocent. So when they do that, it's impossible to see them as anything other than criminals.
And here's where Cantet's dispassionate authenticity lets the film down: these girls are so realistic that we don't really like who they become. The actresses are all terrific at creating believable characters, although the reedy, theatrical Adamson seems strangely miscast as their charismatic leader. So over two and a half long house, the film never builds up a head of steam. We keep watching because their escapades touch on so many big issues, but we are never able to identify with them. Even though it's packed with nicely played moments, there's nothing about the film that lingers in our memory afterwards.
Rich Cline
Facts and Figures
Year: 2012
Genre: Dramas
Production compaines: Haut et Court
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5
Cast & Crew
Director: Laurent Cantet
Producer: Caroline Benjo, Julien Favre, Barbara Letellier, Carole Scotta, Simone Urdl, Jennifer Weiss
Screenwriter: Robin Campillo, Laurent Cantet
Starring: Raven Adamson as Legs, Katie Coseni as Maddy, Madeleine Bisson as Rita, Claire Mazerolle as Goldie, Rachael Nyhuus as Violet, Paige Moyles as Lana, Lindsay Rolland-Mills as VV, Alexandria Ferguson as Marsha, Chelsee Livingston as Agnes, Tamara Hope as Marianne, Rick Roberts as Mr. Kellogg, Briony Glassco as Mrs. Kellogg, Ali Liebert as Muriel Orvis, Gary Reineke as Father Theriault, Ron Gabriel as Uncle Wirtz, Ian Matthews as Mr. Buttinger, James Allodi as Acey Holman, Brandon McGibbon as Ab Sadovsky, David Patrick Green as Car Park's Victim, Jonathan Higgins as Violet's Victim, Nakita Jones as Marigold, Kent Nolan as Viscount, Joey Iachetta as Mr. Wall, Joris Jarsky as Construction worker #1, Michelle Nolden as Well to do lady, Victoria DiGiovanni as Prison Singer, Rob Stewart as Man on bus
Also starring: Caroline Benjo, Carole Scotta, Robin Campillo, Laurent Cantet