
Chloe Moretz, Dakota Fanning, and Saoirse Ronan have given superb performances in any number of films and they've often been proverbial masters of their own destinies in films mostly about their journeys. But what happens once they graduate into 'adult roles'? Will the kind of leading roles in star vehicles like Hanna, The Lovely Bones, Hick, Let Me In, Hound Dog, or The Runaways still be there? Or will they end up alternating between the fairy tale princess box (as we speak Saoirse Ronan is 'in the running' to play Cinderella) and token girlfriends there to be eye-candy and/or emotional therapy for the male leads? It's not set in stone, as any one of them (or all of them) could have careers along the lines of Rachel Weisz, Nicole Kidman, and/or Naomi Watts. But even Weisz and the newest wunderkind Jessica Chastain (who arguably should win the Best Actress Oscar for Zero Dark Thirty) find themselves as the glorified arm candy and/or second fiddle to manly would-be heroes (see, or don't see, Lawless and The Bourne Legacy). The sad irony, especially when it comes to mainstream Hollywood products, is that there are better roles for child actresses than their are for adult actresses. Once she is old enough to be viewed as a sex object, into the girlfriend box they go. Heck, Elle Fanning, barely past puberty has twice found herself playing the token love interest and/or the helpless hostage in the likes of We Bought A Zoo and Super 8.
Jennifer Lawrence is a relative newcomer and has already given several fine performances playing teenagers in films that are either about her or give her meaty subplots to play with (Jodie Foster's The Beaver, X-Men: First Class, etc.). It is perhaps no accident that her first major 'adult' role (never mind that she still looks like a teenager which makes her onscreen romance with 37-year old Cooper borderline creepy) finds her playing the token love interest, and that said role finds her earning some of the best reviews of her career. To be fair, she is an adult who made the choice to play a relatively thin character among the surely many screenplays that have landed at her door over the last couple years. But it's odd and arguably dispiriting that critics/pundits are so quick to proclaim Lawrence's 'just good enough' supporting turn as a kind of 'star is born' moment, as if her terrific leading turns in Winter's Bone and The Burning Plain didn't really count. And it's no coincidence that her one 'big' moment in The Silver Linings Playbook involves her recounting off a flurry of football stats. Yes her concluding line saves the scene from utter implausibility, the fact still stands that it's another 'wow, this girl is awesome because she knows stuff about stereo-typically male interests!' moment that often pops up when dealing with female protagonists. IE - Merida is automatically a more feminist character than Ariel because she enjoys archery and Kristen Stewart's Snow White is automatically a positive female role model because she wears a suit of armor and rides into battle.
Would The Silver Linings Playbook have been taken as seriously had it been about an angry young widow who bonds with a just-released bi-polar teacher whose wife recently cheated on him? Would the film be getting the huzzahs if it were basically the same contrived narrative told from the female's point-of-view? I think we all know the answer to that. We'd be bemoaning Lawrence for starring in a romantic comedy and wring our hands about her traveling down the Katherine Heigl path. But it is nothing less than annoying that one of our finest new actresses is being lauded for playing (pick one) the 'token girlfriend', the 'prize to be won', the 'manic pixie dream girl', etc. She can do better and let us hope that this isn't a testament to the kind of roles that she will be getting offered now that she's old enough to theoretically play adult characters.
Scott Mendelson