Manny
and Lo Movie Review:
Manny
and Lo depicts a rather strange version of family values,
as presented by two unusual kids and an even more unusual
"mother" of sorts.
The
two "unusual" kids are in fact runaways. The oldest one,
Lo, sixteen and pregnant, has taken her eleven-year-old
sister Manny away from her foster home, and now they are
desperately roaming the country, staying one step ahead
of the authorities whom the oldest girl believes is after
them. These girls have never had a regular life, and at
the moment it is impractical to start having one now, as
they find themselves stealing food, and breaking into empty
homes in order to sleep in a comfortable bed, in order to
survive. And there is something else they are looking for,
a person who will help the oldest sister with her baby.
And they believe they've found that person in a seemingly
knowledgeable woman (played by Mary Kay Place) at a maternity
store - so they decide that night to kidnap her for the
purposes of helping them out during this difficult time.
What
occurs next is very loopy. For a while, Lo attempts to mimic
the standard cliches of kidnapping capers, where the kidnapper
is harsh and unyielding, which is rather baffling for us
to watch given the age of the participants and the reason
why they kidnapped this woman. Elaine herself protests against
her captors by not eating, and by devoting her time to finding
the right combination to the lock which keeps her legs together.
Yet once Elaine finds out what is truly going on, she becomes
the thoughtful and resourceful mother, giving out her own
special wisdom on how to care for oneself before the big
day. And so, of course, she and the two girls become much
closer, until a sudden revelation threatens to dismantle
this odd grouping.
Strange
is the most efficient word suitable to describe the plot.
I doubt that many runaway teens would think of such an act
as what these kids do, unless, of course, one of the daytime
talk shows has this story lined up for one of their frequent
"shocking teens" episodes. ("I Don't Have a Real Mom, So
I Kidnapped One."?) And we are also offered the strange
creation of Elaine, played by Mary Kay Place. She is one
kooky person. She is like Martha Stewart with a baby complex,
making grandiose and self-important statements in order
to make herself look the expert in childbirth. She also
insists that she is a very important person in town, and
that everybody will be concerned if she, the so-called baby
expert, is missing for a long time. And, as the video box
would have it, there apparently is a secret within Elaine
which may be damaging, yet I, for one, saw this "big secret"
coming about five or ten seconds after Elaine first enters
the entire film.
Then
again, Manny and Lo is not a suspense picture, but a film
dealing with certain feelings of loneliness and alienation.
Lo and Manny are the most obvious victims of such feelings.
Lo is constantly paranoid of everything around her, from
the cops whom she believes are tailing her to Elaine's neighbours
and associates whom she believes are in on Lo`s kidnapping
schemes, yet evidence seems to suggest that nobody is really
very concerned, or knowledgeable, of any wrongdoing. I gather
that she does need somebody to care for her, yet since she
is unable to allow any real affection into her life (she
is a runaway, after all), she twists those needs into that
of a paranoia of all these people trying to catch her. Manny
is unable to grow up in a proper social environment, either
in her foster home or running off with her sister. She compensates
for this by retreating somewhat into her imagination. And
I also get the feeling that Elaine is lonely too, and that
she needs someone who will really listen to her, and look
up to her, and to be able to pass on values and wisdom to.
It is the intersecting of these three personalities which
may create a real, stable, if strange "family."
Manny
and Lo is certainly a very interestingly strange movie,
and has a somewhat hopeful message in that it claims that
everyone, even those who seem beyond hope, will soon find
someone who can care for them, even if from the most unlikely
places. It also suggests that real familys are not necessarily
biological, but, if circumstances demand, are merely people
who can care for each other. And, certainly, Manny, Lo,
and Elaine deserve to find each other, and to start a new,
and happier, life together.
David
Macdonald
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