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Mathieu’s book takes place in small-town Texas, where the adulation for football stars like Mitchell makes more sense. If Moxie does launch a breakout star, it’ll most likely be skater-turned-actor Nico Hiraga, who plays Vivian’s love interest Seth with laidback charm and swoon-worthy sincerity. (Welcome to the world, baby girl!) But newcomer Robinson frustratingly plays Vivian too much like a girl-next-door her scenes lack a screen-commanding spark that would’ve come in especially handy during some of the film’s saggier moments. Screenwriters Tamara Chestna and Dylan Meyer eventually deepen Vivian as a character by making her fallible - her righteousness sometimes curdles into sanctimony, especially when the growing feminist consciousness among the girls at school doesn’t quickly translate to concrete changes by the administration.
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But the Instagram demonstrations and classroom walkouts soon spiral into bigger and more overt challenges to the school’s microaggressive culture - a change that thrills Vivian, but puts a virtual bounty on the identity of the person behind the publication. It’s the students of color - minus Claudia - who’ve never been appreciated by the administration or favored by their fellow students who cotton to the zine’s message of resistance first. Through her zine (which she names “Moxie”), Vivian poses as just another shy, studious girl by day and attempts to launch a small-scale revolution by night, proposing protests against sexist school policies, like dress codes that primarily penalize girls. Golden Globe Awards Set Bicoastal Show With Tina Fey in New York, Amy Poehler in L.A. Vivian is partly galvanized by seeing the small injustices at her school through a fresh pair of eyes - namely those of Lucy, who’s targeted for her outspokenness (and probably her race) by Mitchell ( Patrick Schwarzenegger), the captain of the football team and a favorite of the status quo-enforcing Principal Shelly ( Marcia Gay Harden). Vivian has been besties with Claudia (Lauren Tsai) since preschool, but new girl Lucy (Alycia Pascual-Peña) brings out a more assertive and political side of Vivian that Claudia’s seldom seen.
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Moxie has neither.Īdapted from Jennifer Mathieu’s 2017 novel of the same name, the movie at least gives its protagonist the kind of thorny love triangle I wish more stories about teen girls would tackle: the arrival of a new confidant that unexpectedly challenges best friendships.
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It’s the kind of movie that needs a feather-light touch or plenty of humor to avoid feeling overly parental.
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Jokes are scattered about, but Poehler’s follow-up to 2019’s wispy Wine Country is a thoroughly earnest affair - the feature equivalent of a white feminist giving her daughter or niece or younger self a heartfelt (if self-consciously intersectional) pep talk about the importance of standing up for oneself and for what’s right. Though it co-stars director Amy Poehler as Vivian’s mom, Moxie is definitely not the Saturday Night Live alum’s Mean Girls (which gets a name-check here). But Moxie exists in its own self-contained universe - one that bears little resemblance to our own. A smarter movie might have asked why that thriving, glossy, youth-oriented pop-feminist industrial complex (that likely powered the Booksmart duo’s adoration of RBG) is less resonant to the female students at Rockport High than the DIY booklet of rage and rants that Vivian (Hadley Robinson) secretly stacks in the girls’ bathrooms, hoping to find like-minded allies. Teenagers today have ready access to more female-forward content and analysis - on issues from the relatively trivial to the supremely grave, via any number of publications and platforms - than any of them could consume in a lifetime. The premise of Netflix’s new teen drama Moxie - of a present-day 11th-grader taking inspiration from her mom’s Riot Grrrl memorabilia to make her school more hospitable for girls through an anonymous feminist zine - is at once wholly plausible and a transparent Gen X fantasy of its cultural relevance to Gen Z.