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The best thing about Our Song, a new film from Jim McKay (Girls
Town), is Kerry Washington, a luminous young actress whose tears must spring from
pools in the depths of her heart. Washington plays Lanisha, an asthmatic inner-city high
school teenager, at that stage of growing up when life's harsh realities challenge
youthful idealism and the mutability of friendships is painfully learned.
Her friends are Maria (Melissa Martinez) and Joycelyn (Anna Simpson).
Maria works in a bakery, bringing home her earnings to help her harassed and impatient
mother make ends meet; her father is in jail. Maria is pregnant by Terrell who has been
avoiding her. In a subway conversation, she tells him that she doesn't want to get
married, but "Will you be around to help me out?" "I'll be around," he
says reluctantly, as he escapes back into the music in his earphones. Not very reassuring.
Maria also has had a toothache for four months, but hasn't been to a dentist.
Joycelyn, a less fully developed character than the others, works in a
boutique and has ambitions to open a shop of her own--that is, if her singing career
doesn't work out. Her mother, on her way out to party, urges Joycelyn not to stay out all
night. Joycelyn is edging away from Lanisha and Maria, moving towards new friends more in
keeping with her ambitions. All three are members of the school marching band (a real such
band is used for the film), a bright and brassy, swinging group of young musicians who
work hard under the strict discipline of their director.
Lanisha's parents are loving and supportive, even if her Dad's working
two shifts means he may not always be able to be there for her. The girls learn that their
school will close because of asbestos problems and choices need to be made about the
future. McKay takes his time with this material, giving his characters a chance to breathe
as he fills in the details of their lives.
Therein lies both the strength and the weakness of the film. McKay's
sense of the telling incident is strong whether it's Joycelyn's mother disparaging her
ambition to be a Miss Universe or both of Letitia's parents showing up for the parade or
Letitia confronting a three hour wait on line to register for school. Maria's interview at
the clinic is especially revealing, if an obvious expositional ploy--asked what she wants
to do with her life, she doesn't have much of an answer because she hasn't ever had the
guidance or the chance to focus on goals.
These moments do add up, but at a price for the effectiveness of the
film; it starts to seem awfully schematic. McKay almost seems to have had a
checklist--these are the points needed to be covered about inner-city life: drugs,
pregnancy, single mothers, absent parents, neglected health, school bureaucracy, and so
on. While Maria's pregnancy is the strongest plot element in the movie, it doesn't have
the dramatic thrust to drive the action forward. When the pace slows, McKay cuts in
another clip of the marching band, providing a high energy jolt to the generally low-keyed
proceedings.
Still, it would take a heart of stone not to respond to these
characters, sympathetically written and sincerely acted. McKay is a director to watch.