Latest

FILM REVIEW – Standup comic’s act gets real in ‘Obvious Child’

By Michael Fox

 

obvious childGoing back at least as far as Moses, Jews have taken public positions at personal risk. Jenny Slate and Gillian Robespierre’s inspiration comes from more recent role models: Larry Fine, Lenny Bruce, Mel Brooks and Woody Allen.

The star and writer-director of the bracingly honest indie comedy “Obvious Child” embrace their Jewish comic influences, and their Jewish upbringings. But they don’t view the frankness of Slate’s character – New York stand-up comedian Donna Stern, who (for better and worse) draws her act from her personal life, including an unexpected pregnancy – as uniquely Jewish.

Robespierre and two other writers caught Slate’s stand-up act some five years ago, and cast her in their short film, “Obvious Child.” Robespierre expanded the story to feature length, and was able to raise the small budget thanks to Slate’s visibility on “Saturday Night Live” (one season) and recent recurring television roles in “House of Lies,” “Parks and Recreation” and “Bob’s Burgers.”

Although it involves revealing a major plot turn, it should be noted that “Obvious Child” pivots on Donna’s decision to have an abortion. A conversation with her mother (played by Polly Draper) provides a key scene, not least because “Obvious Child” is that rare movie in which parents and adult children communicate with and understand each other.

But that neat touch will likely be overlooked amid Donna’s brutally candid and self-critical quips and the film’s willingness to deal directly with abortion.

“It’s not an agenda movie in any way,” Robespierre asserts. “It’s a romantic comedy with a modern look at a modern woman’s experience. One woman, whom we love.”

Robespierre grew up in New York City. Both her parents are Jewish but she didn’t have a bat mitzvah because, she says, “I had dyslexia when I was little so my mother thought I needed to tackle English before Hebrew.”

It may seem like a joke, but it’s not. Slate, who is originally from Milton, supplies the humor with her childhood memories of Passover.

“We had really, really big seders,” she recalls. “My grandfather would read them and it was the best and I would get super, super scared waiting for Elijah. When people would sing ‘Eliahu’ I would have a straight-up meltdown under the table crying so hard.”

That sounds more traumatic than amusing, admittedly. But Slate has a tough side, perhaps developed from growing up watching the Three Stooges with her father – a poet who apparently encouraged his daughter to be outward.

“I remember thinking they’re so violent and loud and just so ludicrous, and I related to that more than anything else,” Slate says. “I always relate to the things that are just the most human. And the highest energy. That’s what I go for, I think.”

Robespierre and Slate want their movie to provoke laughs as well as discussion.

“We are excited for any conversations that it ignites,” Robespierre says, “whether it’s about the right to choose and women’s reproductive rights or whether it’s about our Jewishness, our heritage. But so far we haven’t been cornered on either of those yet, so we’ve been living in a comfortable world.”

 

“Obvious Child” is being shown at several theaters around Connecticut.

SHARE
RELATED POSTS
Connecticut rabbi chosen one of 100 “most inspiring” Jewish clergy
The Forward sees threat from ‘censors,’ but other Jewish editors and groups differ
Author Margot Singer Wins Greenberg Center’s Wallant Book Award

Leave Your Reply