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Movie Review: Youth in Revolt

January 7, 2010

Youth in Revolt_290

Based on the C.D. Payne 1993 bestseller Youth In Revolt: The Journals Of Nick Twisp and directed by Miguel Arteta (Chuck & Buck, Star Maps), the daringly offbeat chucklefest finds Michael Cera (Juno, Superbad) in dual identity crisis perpetual mope mode about his loathed last name Twisp, along with his inability to score dates. But oh, Nick’s gift for goofy gab. In other words, he’s kind of a guy Juno, with that telltale flair for nutty but eloquent outcast monologue-ing.

Nick has also long been harboring a bruised adolescent psyche with auto-erotic tendencies, linked to fears about dying a virgin. Even worse, he’s surrounded by no less than two sets of divorced, sexually active party animal parents that make is miserable state of celibacy even more intolerable. And while Mom (Jean Smart) confides in her role-reversal parenting son that she’s stuck with a paunchy pathological liar younger boy toy trucker beau because she’s 48 years old with stretch marks, the relatively wiser and more mature Nick suggests that she’s selling herself short. In effect, by not waiting for a possible stretch mark fetishist who could materialize just around the corner, who knows.

As Youth In Revolt proceeds in increasingly daffy directions, Nick nearly gets lucky while condemned to summer vacation with his grouchy dad (Steve Buscemi), hooking up with conniving cutie Sheeni (Portia Doubleday). That is, when she’s not sentenced to trailer park duplex house arrest by her fanatically evangelical parents (M. Emmet Walsh, Mary Kay Place), dampening any desires on the part of either Nick or Sheeni’s real boyfriend menacingly lurking about.

Though making the genius move of undercover courtship in drag, however homely in Nick’s alternate female persona, proves a whole lot more effective than either following Sheeni all the way to her French language only boarding school. Or offering to ferry around town their declared barking canine love child in a human baby carrier. At the same time, Nick concludes his rocky road to teen erotic bliss, by wondering without any satisfying explanation at hand whatsoever, how such a ‘monumental distraction’ as sex allowed that entity called civilization to actually happen.

In any case, Youth In Revolt, though threatening at times to descend into terminal silliness, elevates that notorious dumb and dumber genre known as teen comedy, into fresh and verbally tangy territory. Enough so, to easily earn the movie informal bragging rights as Juno II.

Release Date: January 8, 2010

Genre: Comedy

MPAA Rating: R

Studio: Dimension Films (The Weinstein Company), MGM

Director: Miguel Arteta

Screenwriter: Gustin Nash, Miguel Arteta, Michael Cera

Trailer

Actors/Actresses: Michael Cera, Steve Buscemi, Ray Liotta, Justin Long, Jean Smart, Ari Graynor, Fred Willard, Zach Galifianakis, Mary Kay Place

Our Verdict:
_Popcorn3
A smart teen comedy.

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