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Sorry Anti-Choicers! "Juno" Is Neither an Anti-Abortion or Pro-Adoption Polemic

Posted by Amanda Marcotte, Pandagon at 11:09 AM on January 14, 2008.


Hopefully Hollywood will take note and realize that it's not a profit-killer to have the female lead with an actual personality.

I finally managed to see "Juno" in enough time to write this reply to publius's naive suggestion that the movie be a model for anti-choicers, which is to say quit trying to ban abortion and just try to talk people out of it. In other words, be one of the many flavors of pro-choice. Watching the movie itself didn't do much in the way of changing my argument, so I figured I'd keep my actual reactions to it here.

Contrary to the many anti-choice hopes out there, the movie isn't an anti-abortion or pro-adoption polemic; on the contrary, it was a coming-of-age comedy plus teenage romance with teenage pregnancy as the hook. Credit to Marc for noting, as we left, that the character of Juno was an outlandish teenage character in the same style as Max Fischer from "Rushmore", and the pregnancy itself functioned in the same way in this movie as Rushmore did in "Rushmore". Demonizing the abortion clinic to explain why Juno doesn't abortion (and thereby ruin the entire hook of the movie) is one of the sour notes that doesn't work in the movie, but as a friend pointed out to me last night, it was probably the only choice the screenwriter had to get the script approved by Fox Searchlight.

The movie was a reverse of "Rushmore" in a number of ways. "Rushmore" was better in its first half, and "Juno" is much, much better in the second half. The first half of the movie suffered because Juno was too clever by half, and it made it hard to find her compelling. It became clear to me in the second half that Diablo Cody was trying to write about a character who uses her wit and allegiance to being cool as something of an emotional barrier, but she's so enamored of Juno's wit and cool in the first half that she overwrites the character, just a little bit. The script was so good that the lines that are just too much fall like clunkers; it would have been near-perfect if someone had come in with an editing pen and just trimmed up the few lines that are trying too hard.

Across the board, the acting was excellent. I'm particularly in love with Michael Cera, and this part seems like it was written for him, to capture that befuddled sweetness he manages to embody while still being hilariously self-mocking. What really made this movie, and why I suspect it's so popular, is that it's the first romantic comedy down the pipe in god only knows how long where the leads have actual personalities that you care about, instead of being the latest variation of "doucheball slacker meets uptight, personality-less but unbelievably beautiful woman". Hopefully Hollywood will take note and realize that it's not a profit-killer to have the female lead have that oh-so-threatening thing that we in the real world like to call a personality.

But the second half was great. Like "Rushmore", "Juno" had an intergenerational sexual tension conflict that comes to a head in a way that makes you want to hide under your seat in embarrassment for the characters, but this time the person with the inappropriate crush is the older one. I appreciated the whole arc with Jason Bateman; it really captured that crushing blow it is for young women when you deal with your first Nice Guy® who wasn't your friend at all, but was using you as a cipher. But it was a really satisfying storyline, especially after she realized that while it seems flattering to have some guy compare the current or last woman unfavorably to you, it's probably a load of bullshit that's just going to make you feel foolish down the road.

Digg!

Tagged as: abortion, film, juno, rushmore, women in film

Amanda Marcotte co-writes the popular blog Pandagon.


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"Not try to ban abortion..."
Posted by: Bbear41 on Jan 15, 2008 9:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"...But talk people out of it." Yes, that's what freedom of speech is about It's what freedom is about.

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Pregnancy is more than a a story hook
Posted by: ajagert on Jan 23, 2008 10:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author says "Contrary to the many anti-choice hopes out there, the movie isn't an anti-abortion or pro-adoption polemic; on the contrary, it was a coming-of-age comedy plus teenage romance with teenage pregnancy as the hook."

I think Juno's pregnancy is more than a story hook. Juno's journey is about her refusal to be ashamed of her situation. She stays true to herself no matter what other's may think or do.

I'm 44 years-old and had an abortion at 19. When I was Juno's age, that was how my generation handled pregnancy when we weren't ready for it emotionally or financially.

Unfortunately, there is so much shame attached to unplanned pregnancy at that age. Abortion is a fast and easy way out of an unhappy situation. I'm not sure it's the healthiest way for all women, though.

Last weekend, I met a women who is 25 years older than me. She had given up her dream of becoming a concert pianist due to an unplanned pregancy at 19. She married the man who got her pregnant. That's what they did in that generation. Hearing her sad story reminded me why women faught so hard for the right to have an abortion.

I'm so excited about the movie Juno, because it honors the the idea of life (both of the mother and the baby). Past generations either valued the baby, at the expense of the mother's happiness - or the mother, at the expenese of the baby's future life.

It was great seeing a movie about a young girl who got pregnant and (despite the cultural shame) did what's best for herself, her baby, and the people around her.

At 44, I'm still childless and hoping to adopt someday (so, I can see myself as multiple characters in the Juno story!). Polticially, I believe every woman should have the ability to choose what's best for them. Personally, I hope the women of Juno's generation have a healthier experience with unplanned pregnancy than previous generations have had. I've been through this life experience from many different points of entry. I'm very hopeful for a future that goes beyond pro-choice or pro-life after seeing the movie!

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