Girlhood (DVD REVIEW)
Girlhood
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Afro-Parisian Teens Form Female Gang in Flick Available
on DVD
Oscar-nominated
Boyhood is a tortoise-paced, time-lapse affair about what it’s like to grow up
white and male in suburban America.
At the other end of the spectrum, we now have the relatively-dizzying Girlhood,
a cautionary coming-of-age tale exploring what it’s like to be black and female
and trying to survive in a Parisian ghetto.
The story revolves around
Marieme (Karidja Toure), a 16 year-old slacker going nowhere fast. She’s just
learned that she still won’t be headed to high school, despite having already
repeated the 8th grade twice.
Between failing
academically and an abusive home situation, it comes as no surprise that
Marieme might decide to fly the coop and seek a fresh start with the nickname
Vic. What is unexpected, however, is that she isn’t inspired by a boy but by
the idea of joining an all-girl, all-black gang run with an iron fist by a
sassy sister named Lady (Assa Sylla).
The other members of the
estrogen-fueled, sepia posse are Adiatou (Lindsay Karamoh) and Fily (Marietou
Toure), a couple of equally-rudderless rebels without a clue. The four
fugitives from polite society proceed to fritter away their days robbing
youngsters for their lunch money, flirting with boys, cat-fighting with a rival
gang, and gyrating while lip-synching female empowerment anthems like Rihanna’s
“Diamond in the Sky.”
Not much of productive consequence ever
happens in their neck of the ‘hood, which explains why Marieme soon tires of
the unfulfilling routine. Unfortunately, given her limited skill set, the only
alternative she finds is selling narcotics to wealthy white kids for Abou
(Djibril Gueye), a creepy pimp/drug dealer with a hidden agenda.
As compelling as a train
wreck, Girlhood is an eye-opening drama you just can’t take your eyes off of.
Such a super-realistic, slice-of-life often feels more like a documentary than
a drama as you watch losers with low self-esteem do, well, the sort of things
losers with low self-esteem do.
The cinematic equivalent of
slumming around the City of Lights’
seamy underbelly.
Very Good (3 stars)
Unrated
In
French with subtitles
Running
time: 113 minutes
Distributor:
Strand Releasing
DVD
Extras: An interview with actress Karidja Toure; theatrical trailer; and Strand trailers.
To
see a trailer for Girlhood, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJudaZEY-Uc
To
order Girlhood on DVD, visit:
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