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ENTERTAINMENT

Film Review: ‘Stella’s Last Weekend’

By Amy Nicholson

LOS ANGELES (Variety.com) –
Some parents


pull


strings


to


enroll


their kids in their


al


ma mater. In Hollywood,


celebrity parents have been hammering together


family


showcases for their


progeny —


backyard plays


elevated to the


screen —


and taking their own bows as writer, director, producer, or co-star.


Earlier this summer was “The Year of Spectacular


Men,” Lea Thompson and Howard Deutch’s salute to their daughters Madelyn and Zoey, and the most recent endowment is “Stella’s Last Weekend,” by actress-turned-filmmaker Polly Draper, which stars her sons Nat and Alex Wolff as two brothers dragged across the threshold of maturity over a dramatic weekend with one virginity loss, one fraternal betrayal, and one dying dog, the Stella of the title.


It’s inaccurate


to consider “Stella’s Last Weekend” merely an expensive gift from Draper to her sons. Nat


and Alex are both sought-after young actors


who, since their days together on Nickelodeon’s “The Naked Brothers Band,” have


starr


ed


separately in such


hits


as “


The Fault in Our Stars,” “Paper Towns,” “Hereditary” and “Jumanji.”


They’re in the position of saying no,


not


pleading for


their


mother’s


yes


. The irony is that


Draper’s


own


skills would be better showcased herself if she had cast


a


nyone else. The characters she’s


created, Jack (Nat Wolff) and Oliver (),


are


teen


cads


who yell at old ladies


who dare to


shush


them


at the


ballet.


They’re destructive, callous, petty, and cruel,


the heroes of the film only by default because everyone else has been written to be worse


.


There’s a w


asps’


nest of rich ballerinas the


brothers love to


irr


itate by,


say, chewing a piece of sushi and spitting it in a dancer’s hand.


But such rudeness is justified, the film says, because one of the girls has spread false rumors that she and Jack had a one-night-stand, a lie that makes no sense given the way she glares at him like a worm.


On paper, the script could be a skewering of adolescence


sociopathy


, a millennial “American Psycho,” sans all the murders. With other actors — ones who would have to earn empathy — “Stella’s Last Weekend” could even be good. The Wolffs are fine actors, and, no shocker, convincing siblings. But they’re playing characters, well, only a mother could love, and Draper
 
beams such


pure


 delight at the


pair,


 such blinding admiration,


that the movie


trips over its


 assumption that the audience will


adore them, too.


Draper even models divine forgiveness


, having cast herself as


their


widowed


onscreen mother


Sally,


who’s


dizzy, charming and delightfully unpredictable,


the type to throw a funeral party for a dog.


In one scene,


she backs down from grounding Oliver and


then


whisper-begs


him


to apologize for calling her a “bitch.”


N


ot even for her sake, but so


that


her live-in boyfriend Ron (Nick Sandow) will think she’s got parenthood under control. The boy


smirks that she’s


pitiful. She


gratefully


kisses him on the cheek.


“Stella’s Last Weekend” plays these scenes for


light


comedy, or at worst, a teasing rap on the knuckles.


But it’s not slapstick


or satire —


the indie pop score is too sincere. Though the brothers take no one’s hurt feelings seriously, the film is devoted to theirs. Their


trouble


starts silently.


Jack, the quieter and older of the two,


spots a gorgeous girl across the


subway platform.


He says nothing — e


ven


the camera doesn’t dare approach


her


— but from a polite


20


feet


away, the audience can tell that


Violet (Paulina Singer)


is


radiant


in her


silver pleated


skirt


and snickers


.


Shortly


after, Jack tells


the extroverted-to-the-point-of-unhinged


Oliver


about the non-incident, that he saw a girl who broke his heart after a magical


encounter at a party.


And then


Violet rings the doorbell and introduces herself as Oliver’s new girlfriend. Cue a love triangle, teenager-


style, where big scenes take place


over text messages or at an


arcade claw machine or the beach, where Violet deals with the awkwardness by stripping to her underwear and plunging into the surf.


It’s a twist that’s way too parochial for a film set in Queens, made doubly implausible by insisting that of course Violet would be interested in a younger high schooler who dry humps everything, including Ron (twice).


Meanwhile, as grown-up emotions and grown-up stakes are off the table, the audience can only half-heartedly interest itself in which brother will be the momentary blip of a bad boyfriend that Violet will forget by the time she turns 30.


Still,


Singer is a luminous, mature presence, at least until the script forces her to


act


otherwise for reasons neither she nor the film can explain


,


and to seem out-of-character even as they’re happening.


E


ven overbearing, embarrassingly combover-ed Ron who we first meet flipping the finger at the dinner table, shifts


personalities to mutate into someone


lovable whenever “


Stella’s Last Weekend”


decides it’s time for a hug.


As


for


Stella


herself


,


the terminally ill dog, she gets the POV shot that sums up the film: an exhausted creature staring at two boys who ignore her life-or-death drama to fist-fight about something dumb.

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