|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Yet despite their immense stupidity, Romy and Michele are so adorably vapid that you can’t hate them. Similarly, while this movie easily could have been just 90 minutes of fart jokes and pratfalls, it’s not. This is a film with genuine heart, and much more of it than you’d expect going in. So while there’s obviously nothing remotely realistic about the story, it successfully connects with the inherent desire most people have to be liked and respected by our peers. And since we tend to divide ourselves into social cliques long after grade school ends, there’s an emotional component here we can all relate to regardless of age. None of it would work without a great cast, and a great script for them to work with. The writing is crisp, the jokes tend to rely on subtle timing and improvisation, and almost everyone involved is more than up to the task. If you don’t think Garofalo is a good actor, watch the moment she asks Alan Cumming to dance and he says “It’s no fun unless you really love the person.” To paraphrase Bart Simpson, you can literally see the moment when her soul is snuffed out. Everyone is great but perhaps none more so than Julia Campbell, who plays the Head Bitch in a Heathers-esque group of popular girls who spent high school making everyone’s lives miserable. She is, in a word, sublime. I really doubt David Mirkin is that gifted a director, so I’m putting this on the casting director. Well done. Well done, indeed. But the core of the film remains Romy and Michele’s relationship, and the strength of their friendship. They’ve always got each other’s backs. They are - for the most part - relentlessly (almost foolishly) optimistic, and their worldview is so innocently naive it’s impossible not to love them. They’re kind of like a Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie that you DON’T want to stab. This is easily one of my favorite comedies of the 1990s, and not only am I astonished it doesn’t get more love than it does, I can’t believe there was never a sequel (the horrible TV adaptation with Katherine Heigl does not count). If you haven’t seen Romy and Michele, stop what you’re doing and rectify that. If you have, do the same. Trust me. It’s been too long.
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
Friday, November 1, 2024 © 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc. |