Review: Lola Versus

Score:C

Director:Daryl Wein

Cast:Greta Gerwig, Joel Kinnaman, Zoe Lister-Jones, Hamish Linklater

Running Time:86 Minutes

Rated:R

Pitched as an alternative to the traditional Hollywood rom-com
but still resembling anything but, Daryl Wein's Lola Versus suffers, like its title character, from missed
opportunity.  Well, that's not the
only thing its title character suffers from.  Lola, played by Greta Gerwig playing Greta Gerwig, is a
twenty-nine year old (the cusp of thirty! The biological clock is ticking! Guh!)
New York graduate student on the verge of marrying her longtime boyfriend, Luke
(Joel Kinnaman), until he abruptly breaks off the engagement.  With assistance from her friends Alice
(Zoe Lister-Jones, also a co-writer on the film) and Henry (Hamish Linklater),
the latter harboring a secret affection for Lola, she attempts to regain her
footing in the world.  It doesn't
go so well.

Lola is an empathetic character, if not an entirely
sympathetic one, as she spends most of the film following up an idiotic mistake
with another equally idiotic mistake. 
Gerwig, as aforementioned doing her whole Greta Gerwig thing, distracts
from the fact that Lola, despite being in nearly every frame of the film, seems
to be woefully underwritten.  When
the film's inevitable denouement comes, Lola's realizations about herself seem
unearned.  All the audience learns about
her is that she's kind of bad at meeting men and occasionally seems to be
working on a dissertation.  Speaking
of which, for a film that seems to be trying to explore woman's independence, Lola Versus wildly fails the Bechdel
test (used to measure the presence of women in film).  Even Alice, at first the film's most interesting and fun
character, eventually starts in about how much she needs a man in her
life.  It's all been done before,
and that's not necessarily a bad thing, but Lola
Versus pretends it's something else.

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