Get entertainment news on your mobile phone. Find out more
It may not quite be the description that the studio bosses were looking for – but ‘perfectly fine’ is an apt one for Diablo Cody’s first screenplay since Juno and one that flies against most US critics who have savaged the film.
The bad reviews reek of getting back at the upstart who won an Oscar for her debut screenplay and Megan Fox for being, well, Megan Fox. Forgetting for a moment that it stars the current sexiest woman alive and is written by a woman who polarizes opinion with her knowingly cool dialogue (“move on.org” is one example in the film), and just rate it as a horror movie then it’s fair to say that it’s a decent entry in an incredibly overcrowded genre.
Megan Fox plays Jennifer, a vacuous, cheerleader who has the whole high school world at her oh-so-perfectly manicured fingertips. Her best friend, Needy (Amanda Seyfried) hangs around with her prettier childhood friend despite it being obvious they are heading in completely different paths.
Things take a turn for the worse after a concert they go to burns down in flames and the band turn out to be devil worshippers – the result of which leaves Fox transforming into a high school boy-snacking demon.
It’s clear Cody is aiming for a biting Heathers-esque satire on high school life but never quite reaches the brilliance of that film. Nor does it seem to want to cast such an angry eye on Jennifer, with too many punches pulled for the idea to fully work.
Fox is as beautiful as you would expect – a Marilyn Monroe bombshell with pom-poms and with the same limited acting ability. Seyfried however, fares much better - showing enough edge to her nerdy character at the beginning to ensure the transition to ass-kicking demon hunter rings somewhat true.
For the most part, it’s as smart and sassy as you would expect from the writer of Juno and a fun, diverting horror film all the same.
- Martin Howden
Copyright © 2009.
Jennifer Check and Anita ''Needy'' Lesnicky are lifelong best friends and high school students in tiny Devil's Kettle, Minnesota. Needy is the practical, bookish counterpart to small-town sexpot cheerleader Jennifer, who controls most everyone around her Needy included with knowing relish using her hypnotic good looks. After Jennifer and Needy escape a grisly fire at the local dive bar, Jennifer is whisked away in a creeper van by the band that was playing there, despite Needy's pleas not to. In a ''sell your soul for rock and roll''-style move, the fame-hungry indie rockers, Low Shoulder, kill Jennifer in an occult, virgin sacrifice ceremony, which goes awry because Jennifer isn't one. After being left for dead, Jennifer shows up at Needy's house covered in blood, spewing black bile and grinning wickedly.
The next day, amidst the fire tragedy aftermath, Devil's Kettle's star football player is found disemboweled and half-eaten in the woods adjacent to the school. Jennifer, of course, did it, and after the vixen kills a sweet emo boy, she confesses to Needy (after a too-brief girl-on-girl makeout session complete with heavy tongue close-ups), that the botched sacrifice turned her into a demon, and that she becomes happier and more beautiful and thus deadlier after she feasts on the blood of horny high school boys. Needy does some research in the occult section of the high school library and discovers her best friend is indeed a pawn of the devil. Needy warns her boyfriend Chip to watch out for Jennifer, and consequently finds herself covered in bile with Chip dead in her arms at the prom because he doesn't. Then she seeks revenge.
The ever enjoyable Amanda Seyfried takes the lead as plain jane Needy, and Johnny Simmons is her sweet, doting boyfriend Chip. Adam Brody, doing a spot-on Brandon Flowers impression, is the killer front man of Low Shoulder. Amy Sedaris makes a too-brief cameo as Needy's mom and Juno's dad J.K. Simmons is a high school teacher with an unexplained hook for a hand. Megan Fox is in it too.
Diablo Cody's script is smart, funny and infinitely more interesting than the typical teen slasher swill. The movie revels in its gory moments without being gratuitous and employs a healthy amount of sex without coming off like it's pandering to horny teens. Rather, Jennifer's Body is the perfect template for the incomparably hot Megan Fox to use her looks as a plot-forwarding mechanism. This is a professionally signficant departure from her eye candy turns in the Transformers movies and lets Fox prove that she can actually act. There's no one else in Hollywood right now better suited to this role. Fox's performance is unhinged and charming, and she makes good use of all the Diablo Cody-isms (''You need a mani bad. You should find a Chinese chick to buff your situation.''), that devil-may-care Jennifer gets to utter. The love/hate best friend relationship is interesting, and there's a load of good-girl-gone-wrong catharsis in Seyfried's revenge-fueled rampage. Cody and director Karyn Kusama are adept in skillfully, if a bit condescendingly, creating a convincing depiction of a small Midwestern town, which serves as the perfect ultra-real backdrop for the story.
Cody's unique style adds the perfect quirk factor to what could otherwise be run-of-the-mill cinematic garbage.The Cody-isms, however, sometimes come off as cloying when they aren't being uttered by Fox. Also, hopeful Fox worshippers might be disappointed that the sexually radiant actress, despite her character's penchant for using sex to lure her victims, doesn't actually bare anything that necessitates the film's R-rating.
With its surprising plot twists, a snarky bff vs. bff subplot and Cody's flair for linguistics, Jennifer's Body is a smart horror flick for anyone who enjoys jolly gore or Megan Fox in a mini-skirt.
Hollywood.com rated this film 3 stars.
Copyright © CinemaSource 2009.
Vote team Edward or team Jacob and watch exclusive interviews with the cast, our first review and photo galleries.
Click any picture to enlarge…
More "Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire" premiere photos…