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Posted: Wed., Jan. 21, 2004, 1:12pm PT
A Sony Pictures Entertainment release of a
Screen Gems presentation. Produced by Angela Sperling, Jasmine Kosovic.
Executive producer, Larry Kennar. Co-producers, Stacy Codikow, Pat
Scanlon. Directed, written, edited by Angela Robinson.
Amy - Sara Foster
Lucy Diamond - Jordana Brewster
Max - Meagan Good
Dominique - Devon Aoki
Janet - Jill Ritchie
Mrs. Peatree - Holland Taylor
Mr. Phipps - Michael Clarke Duncan
Bobby - Geoff Stults
Scud - Jimmi Simpson
Ninotchka - Jessica Cauffiel
By
DAVID ROONEY
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| Meagan Good, left, Devon Aoki and Jill
Ritchie star in 'D.E.B.S.,' a spy spoof and teen fantasy
directed and written by Angela Robinson. |
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Taking high-concept to a new high, Angela
Robinson's debut feature "D.E.B.S." is a disarmingly silly confection
centering on an elite paramilitary academy that grooms girls into
sharp-shooting government secret agents. Lesbian teen fantasy blends the
infectious buoyancy of high-school pics like "Bring It On" with the
comic-strip, girl-power action of "Charlie's Angels" and the spy
spoofery of the "Austin Powers" franchise. Surprisingly, it not only
hangs together but becomes progressively more enjoyable and could be a
tidy performer for Screen Gems with young female audiences, with a zesty
afterlife on DVD.
Expanded from Robinson's 2003 one-joke short film, this bigger,
bolder incarnation is far more engaging than other young lesbian
comedies like "But I'm a Cheerleader." And while it in no way rivals the
supremacy of teen-pic classics like "Clueless," the film's good-natured
mirthfulness and the relative non-issue of its sexual agenda should make
it inclusive to teenage girls regardless of their sexual persuasion.
Hidden within the S.A.T. is a secret aptitude test designed to
measure students' propensity to lie, cheat, fight and kill, thus
identifying candidates for the underground academy known as D.E.B.S. The
academy's A team of fourth-year graduating students is captained by
aggressively dedicated Max (Meagan Good) and includes straight-A student
Amy (Sara Foster), prim Janet (Jill Ritchie) and chain-smoking French
sex addict Dominique (Devon Aoki).
Informed by academy president Phipps (Michael Clarke Duncan) that
arch supervixen Lucy Diamond (Jordana Brewster) has resurfaced and is
scheduled to meet with Russian assassin Ninotchka (Jessica Cauffiel),
the girls are dispatched to monitor the situation, with the Feds also on
alert. All are unaware the meeting is merely a blind date set up by
Lucy's loyal sidekick Scud (Jimmi Simpson) in a bid to get her back in
the romance race game after being brutally dumped three years earlier.
When a slip-up alerts the villains to the agents' presence, a
firefight erupts. But as Lucy makes her escape, a close encounter with
Amy leaves the bad girl lovestruck, while Amy, who's just offloaded her
boyfriend (Geoff Stults), feels an attraction she can't quite fathom.
Offering herself as research for Amy's thesis, Lucy lures the D.E.B.S.
student into her world, where she reveals herself to be just another
misunderstood girl yearning for a real relationship.Imperious D.E.B.S.
headmistress Mrs. Peatree (a priceless Holland Taylor) instructs Amy to
play the lamb to Lucy's Lecter in an attempt to bring her in. But Lucy
turns the tables on the girls during a bank robbing stunt, igniting the
sparks between her and Amy with a kiss and then staging a fake
kidnapping so they can be together.
Surprised in the blissful same-sex tryst by her shocked rescuers, Amy
accepts her duty to return to the side of righteousness and
respectability. But Lucy's perseverance and Amy's own sense of what's
right prompt her to make a life-changing decision with the help of her
girlfriends.
Somewhat in the vein of "Legally Blonde," Robinson's script gets
considerable mileage out of the incongruity of girls bringing their
Cosmo-informed worldview to the action-espionage sphere: admiring the
villain's sweater during a mission; nemeses swapping views on emotional
issues and pausing to floss before a heated face-off.
Outfitted in Britney-era schoolgirl plaid micro-minis and customized,
midriff-baring blouses, the D.E.B.S. quartet is appealingly played.
As the group underdog, whose disapproval of Amy's waywardness is
tempered by romantic complicity and a yen for Scud, Ritchie -- the only
returning cast member from the original short -- scores major laughs.
Aoki has fun as the sneering Eurotrash, whose esteem for Amy increases
after her Sapphic excursion. Foster plays Amy as a smart girl sweetly
confused by what's happening to her, while Brewster -- made up to look
more Demi than Demi Moore -- is sexy-dangerous with an attractive soft
side.
Production designer Chris Anthony Miller slaps on an appropriately
colorful gloss and lots of amusing retro-styled spy gadgetry, often
enhanced by refreshingly low-tech effects work. Pace is brisk, nudged
along by the requisite diet of bouncy pop tunes.
Camera (Deluxe color, Panavision widesrceen,
24p HD), M. David Mullen; music, Steven Stern; production designer,
Chris Anthony Miller; set decorator, Laura Evans; costume designer,
Frank Helmer; sound (Dolby Digital/SDDS/DTS), Shawn Holden; sound
designer, Steve Tusher; visual effects supervisors, David Tecson, Mark
Thompson; associate producer, Douglas Salkin; line producer, Michael
Crawford; assistant director, Sholto Roeg; casting, Rick Montgomery.
Reviewed at Sundance Film Festival (Premieres), Jan. 17, 2004. Running
time: 91 MIN.
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