| “Kit
Kittredge: An American Girl” is certainly heartwarming
and innocent, but that doesn’t mean it’s
shallow and cloying. I admit that I thought it would
be, mostly because I was expecting a virtual clone of
last year’s awful “Nancy Drew.” There
are certain similarities: both feature plucky young
girls who do a lot of investigating; both have an assortment
of colorful side characters; both are based on a series
of stories, both feature Max Theroit. Unlike “Nancy
Drew,” however, “Kit Kittredge” aims
to tell a good story with real subtexts; taking place
at the height of the Great Depression, we meet characters
that are downtrodden and desperate, not only because
their financial situations are bleak, but also because
they face the scorn and rejection of ignorant people.
This adaptation of stories drawn from the “American
Girl” doll line mixes childish zeal with some
very mature themes, and that alone made it worth seeing.
Abigail Breslin brings enthusiasm, charm, and heart
to the title character, a ten-year-old girl from Cincinnati,
Ohio who runs a tree house club and dreams of becoming
a newspaper reporter. She wants to write stories with
fresh angles so that she can finally get into print.
A pair of hobos--a helpful teenager named Will (Max
Theroit) and his young friend, Countee (Willow Smith)--inspire
Kit to write an article on hobo life. The fresh angle
is that it will be told entirely from a kid’s
perspective, which may be needed in this case since
many adults feel hobos are good-for-nothing leeches
that suck the government dry. Kit has heard this rhetoric
from her neighbors and classmates--one especially snotty
young boy says that selling eggs and wearing dresses
made of chicken feed bags bring you one step closer
to the poorhouse.
But Kit is beginning to understand the hobos’
plight, not only because many of her neighbors have
lost their homes to foreclosures, but also because her
unemployed father (Chris O’Donnell) is forced
to find work all the way in Chicago. Hoping to make
ends meet, Kit’s mother (Julia Ormond) turns their
home into a boarding house. This is how we meet: Ms.
Dooley (Jane Krakowski), a husband-seeking dance instructor;
the disapproving Mrs. Howard (Glenne Headly) and her
young son, Sterling (Zach Mills); Ms. Bond (Joan Cusack),
a slightly goofball mobile librarian; and Jefferson
Burke (Stanley Tucci), a magician. When the subject
of hobo robberies comes up, Mrs. Kittredge has everyone
put their valuables in her lockbox. When it’s
stolen, everyone suspects Will as the culprit, including
the police. Kit takes it upon herself to investigate.
Despite what the evidence suggests, she believes her
hobo friend is innocent.
It's fairly obvious that “Kit Kittredge”
is a commentary on prejudice; at one point in the film,
Kit tells a cantankerous newspaper editor (Wallace Shawn)
that there are good hobos and there are bad hobos, much
like good apples and bad apples. She then gets a hard
lesson in office politics when it’s revealed that
newspapers print only what the public wants to read,
and the unfortunate truth is that the public is intolerant
of hobos. Naturally, those who say this haven’t
met the people living in a hobo jungle, as Kit has;
they’re some of the nicest people around, and
they willingly let Kit photograph them and write about
them for her article. Messages of acceptance and understanding
are not new, certainly not for a family film. But unlike
a lot of other such stories, “Kit Kittredge”
doesn’t condescend, and when we leave, we feel
both entertained and emotionally rejuvenated.
Aside from Kit, one of the film’s best characters
is Sterling, who at such a young age has already been
beaten down by life. Sterling’s father, much like
Kit’s, also left Cincinnati to find work, and
communication with his family has steadily decreased.
You see nothing but hurt and sadness in this boy’s
eyes. He and Kit are practically in the same boat, which
is why they form a special bond. Kit is now worried
that her father will forget her and her mother completely,
even after promising to write them every single week.
I remember a scene when Kit types a letter to her father;
the frustration and fear she pours into the first draft
makes for a heartbreaking moment.
I can’t guarantee that adults will be as receptive
to “Kit Kittredge: An American Girl” as
kids will, but I definitely recommend they give it a
chance. The doll may be a hollow piece of plastic, but
the character is something else entirely--she’s
kind, spirited, intelligent, and just plain wonderful.
Some may criticize the film for being too sentimental,
and indeed, it’s light-hearted and optimistic,
more than would be expected from a story set during
the Depression. But it’s more mature than it lets
on. Even with a childish sense of humor, hopelessness
and grief are not spared on the audience. It’s
always a pleasure to see a family film that was made
with all audiences in mind, not just kids. “Kit
Kittredge” is such a film, one of the most enjoyable
I’ve seen all summer.
- Chris Pandolfi
|
It will be interesting to see what kinds of roles Abigail Breslin takes as she grows older. Hopefully she doesn't go the Dakota Fanning route.