Girl Power!

Finally, some family films with strong female characters

BY: Sharon Linnea

A recent study discovered that a shocking 72 percent of the characters in kids’ films are male, and, in fact, most of the films I’ve reviewed so far bear that out. So it was with high hopes that I grabbed my daughter and her friend Jordan and headed out to see a couple of promising movies with female leads.

 

Aquamarine

 

AquamarineFirst we headed for an undisguised mini-chick flick, "Aquamarine." If nothing else, I can tell you that girl power movies do have an audience--the theater was packed with girls, moms, and aunts, with only a couple of lost-looking dads and grandpas sprinkled about.

           

The story follows two best friends in the last week of summer, before one of them must move far away from Florida. They both spend all their time reading teen magazines and crushing on a gorgeous surfer-dude lifeguard, who is obviously too old (and too cool) for them. Then, one night after a storm, a mermaid washes up in the beach club’s swimming pool. For no believable reason, she has two days to prove to her Neptunian father that human love exists--and she immediately zeros in on said lifeguard. The two girls agree to help her out, in hopes of earning the wish the mermaid can grant them.

 

Here is where my conflicted feelings come in. Both girls I brought with me thought this was the best movie they’d ever seen (admittedly, a title bestowed more than once already this year). All the main characters--good, bad, and indifferent--were female, except the hunky lifeguard-as-eye-candy. A nice turnabout, to be sure. And it was certainly fun to have this theater full of girls relating to the world’s worst possible crisis: the losing of your BFF (Best Friend Forever). My daughter has faced this several times already, and it’s truly wrenching, This audience of tweeners also obviously got the whole “trying to catch his eye” thing, and the delicious agony of crushing on boys who are impossibly out of your league, at least age-wise. They loved the showing-up the spiteful girl scenes, and the female bonding scenes.

           

And yet, part of me couldn’t help but be sorry that we finally got a true girl movie, and it was so frivolous, kind of every young male’s worst nightmare of what empty-headed, giggly girls are about. The boys don’t come off much better--the eye-candy lifeguard was apparently just waiting for the right naïve, up-for-anything, stacked blonde mermaid to wander by.

           

Part of my disappointment also was that this was based on a novella by Alice Hoffman, a wonderful writer who expertly explores the rich, mythic territory of children crossing over into adulthood.

           

Yet the girls really enjoyed it, and they’re not the giggly-preteen-magazine set, but it is a part of young girl’s life that they understood. The very ending is certainly a Girl Power Statement, and I guess it’s not fair to insist that girl movies be held to standards any higher than their boy bonding counterparts.

           

So, if you’re a mom or an aunt who’s up for a popcorn movie with the young girls (probably 6-14), have a go. If you’re a man or boy conscripted to tag along, be afraid. Be very afraid.


Continued on page 2: Shakespeare for the Tween Girl Set »

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