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A ray of sunshine onscreen, Drew Barrymore isn’t going to suddenly make a grungy roller-derby movie. (Even the naughtier ex-Drew who once flashed David Letterman couldn’t swing that.) So she’s done something harder: made an intensely sweet roller-derby movie about letting your kids grow up happy. Whip It, Barrymore’s confident debut behind the camera, starts off in a desperate Texas nowheresville—an oven of blond beauty pageants and crap jobs. Then, along with its teenage dreamer, the film sneaks off to an evocatively captured Austin and the world of cute but callous indie-rockers and snarly girls in kneepads. Finally, it ends with a kitchen reconciliation. (This is where Barrymore is most effective at conveying heartbreak.)
Along that exuberant trajectory, Whip It rights a few wrongs. First, there’s proof here that Juno’s Ellen Page is no mere snark in the pan. She uses her tiny frame to project vulnerability, coming alive as she flings herself into danger, shedding the starchy name Bliss Cavendar for the unlikely track moniker “Babe Ruthless.” In assembling her sassy sisterhood, Barrymore has also given the criminally underused Kristen Wiig her first proper role, as a maternal roller with no-bullshit sympathies. (You wish the script hadn’t fully sanded down the butch aspects of the derby scene, but apparently that’s what subtext is for.) Most substantially, the film pits parental hopes against the private ambitions of youth, and somehow manages to take both sides. Marcia Gay Harden is the picture’s treasure; watching her swell with concern at her daughter’s choices, you understand how hard it is to let go—even when kneepads are provided.—Joshua Rothkopf
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I wasn't overwhelmed by this film - it had some cute bits, and the roller-derby content is inherently fun.... Some good performances saved it from being totally forgettable. See my review at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qTwC1FVzbtQ