When
three generations of women collide, it isn't always pretty. In Georgia
Rule, Lindsay Lohan (Mean Girls) stars as Rachel, a wild child
whose mother Lilly (Felicity Huffman, Desperate Housewives) ships
her off to Idaho to be tamed by Georgia (Jane Fonda, On Golden Pond)--Lilly's
own cantankerous mom.
There, 17-year-old Rachel shocks the conservative community with her short
shorts, eager sexuality (which she plies on everyone from 12-year-old boys
to unsophisticated, but hot, Mormon neighbors), and her tales of possible
sexual abuse at the hands of her somewhat slimy stepfather (Cary Elwes,
The Princess Bride).
As directed by Garry Marshall (Beaches, Pretty Woman), Georgia
Rule is a flawed chick flick where the women are tolerable but not
particularly likeable. The characters we want to know more about are the
peripheral ones we don't see enough of--the men.
Simon (Dermot Mulroney), the kindly (and sexy) veterinarian who was once
madly in love with Lilly, in many ways is the film's moral compass. A widower
whose wife and son died tragically in an accident, Simon would've made
a more compelling movie subject than these women.
And for all his latent pining for Lilly, the moviegoer feels relieved for
him that dodged a bullet by not marrying into this dysfunctional family.
While the female leads aren't quite believable as mother, daughter, and
grandmother, they all have strong moments in the film that save it from
being a groaning mess. While Lohan doesn't exhibit the charm she displayed
in Mean Girls, she more than holds her own in parts with the scene-stealing
Fonda, who is quite good at chewing up the scenery. |