REVIEW

Movie Review: Juno

Written by Kevin Gustafson
Published February 29, 2008

Most people label Juno as cute, which makes it sound like a chick flick. In reality, I found it to have a focused, well-written story with great dialogue and a rocking score by The Moldy Peaches. Suicide Girl-like screenwriter Diablo Cody effortlessly writes a story with real people and real situations.

Juno revolves around a 16-year-old-girl also named Juno (Ellen Page) who sleeps with her dorky best friend Paulie Bleeker (Michael Cera) one night and immediately breaks off their friendship. The moment is forgotten until a couple of months later when she discovers she’s pregnant. She considers getting an abortion but settles on adoption. The aspiring parents, Vanessa (Jennifer Garner) and Mark (Jason Bateman) Loring, have been unsuccessful at having a child of their own. Juno becomes attached to the adults who seem to represent her idea of perfect love and marriage. Meanwhile Paulie approaches Juno wanting to restart their abortive love affair. Juno cruelly rebuffs him. Though it’s obvious that she’s falling for him, it takes nine months to realize what that experience really meant.

Any guys reading this are probably going "hmmm..." This isn’t a Lifetime Movie of the Week. Be brave. Only one scene will make males cringe and all the females giggle. Just so we can move on, I’ll spoil it now. It involves cross-country runners and their short shorts. Okay, dudes? Really, everybody will like Juno because it’s not the usual 'redneck with a bastard child' story. I firmly believe the actual number of poor teenage runaways with abusive boyfriends is rarer than friends who fall in love. Boy or girl, everybody can relate to Juno because it doesn’t shove its lovers through a meat grinder of heartbreaks.

The characters don’t fit any one high school movie stereotype. Like real people they have many sides to their personalities. Juno is very complicated. She’s artistic but pursues some un-punk hobbies like going to the mall with her cheerleader friend, Leah.  A smart and plain-dressed bird, she is troubled enough that Paulie’s mom warns him away from her.   

Because she’s so confused, Juno is the perfect person to show how teens assume they know everything. She schools the older Mark Loring on his classic music and movie collection. It’s likely she saw a top ten list and is repeating what she read verbatim. More importantly, Juno doesn’t understand relationships. She picks Mark and Vanessa as adoptive parents because their love seems real at first. However she learns that marriages have cracks. That’s something she’s going to have to apply to her relationship with Paulie.

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Kevin Gustafson received his B.A in Film and Digital Media from University of California Santa Cruz. Not surrendering his T Shirt and Jeans just yet, he is deciding to pursue a movie-related career based on his love of watching and talking about movies. He is a contributing writer for Filmschoolrejects.com
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Movie Review: Juno
Published: February 29, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Art House, Video: Comedy, Video: Drama, Video: Romantic Comedies
Writer: Kevin Gustafson
Kevin Gustafson's BC Writer page
Kevin Gustafson's personal site
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