It's Not the End of the World
Towards the middle of Girls Can't Swim, 15-year-old best
friends Gwen
(Isild Le Besco) and Lise (Karen Alyx) clean a freshly caught
fish in Gwen's kitchen. "It's gooey," Lise says. "Like sex,"
Gwen responds, and they begin gleefully tussling and throwing
fish guts at each other in a display of youthful exuberance and
eroticism.
Sex surrounds everything these girls do -- even gutting fish.
Certainly their friendship is full of unbridled tension.
Mercurial, rebellious Gwen is a bundle of nervous and confused
energy. One moment she is writing letters to Lise with erotic
fervor ("My precious Lise: the days are long without you... No,
the nights"), and the next she is fucking her slightly dense
boyfriend Fredo (Julien Cottereau) in The Little Fury,
her father's boat. Gwen is quite the wildcard, and neither her
parents nor her friends -- nor, really, herself -- can predict
her next move.
Lise, on the other hand, whose family spends summers at the
ocean town where
Gwen lives, is sullen and defiant. She is obsessed both with
keeping Gwen as childlike -- i.e., virginal -- as Lise herself
seems to be, and with releasing her own pent-up sexuality like a
fully-grown woman. Although Isild Le Besco as Gwen has received
critical accolades, Karen Alyx's performance is thoroughly
moving, brooding and furious as only 15-year-olds can be. And
her anger isn't something that has any obvious cause other than
teenage angst, which in turn makes her and her anger all the
more believable. It's not a new observation, but girls don't
follow "logical" motivations.
The film's lack of narrative logic is less admirable. Girls
Can't Swim moves from scene to scene, from mildly shocking
plot twist to mildly shocking plot twist, with all the sense of
an adolescent's moods. It is to director Anne-Sophie Birot's
credit that Girls Can't Swim never drops quite as far
into the lurid depths of teen girl angst as it might have. Each
surprising event in the girls' lives is presented with a cool,
matter-of-fact openness rarely encountered in contemporary
American cinema. And as a teen flick for the school uniformed,
coffeehouse crowd, it might have functioned as a breath of fresh
air. Surely more adolescent girls might see themselves as Lise
or Gwen than in Rachel Leigh Cook or Sarah Michelle Gellar. It
would certainly be healthier, since neither is transformed into
the prom queen or exposed as a real bitch. Their problems may be
a bit far-fetched, but the characters keep a strong footing in
the real world.
Unfortunately, much like last year's Donnie Darko,
another almost-great teen angst movie, Girls Can't Swim
feels less like it's about teenagers, than it was written by
teenagers. As a result, the girls come off as confused in ways
no character on a WB show could ever be -- a tremendous
achievement, indeed. But all of this realism in Gwen and Lise
eventually fails. The story suffers "where-to-go-next
syndrome," which is solved by a slightly immature method of
shocking (or attempting to shock) the audience. We see so very
many shots of 15-year-old breasts (shocking, at least to an
American audience), 15-year-olds fucking, and bleak images of
death. However, because these images and events seem to emerge
from somewhere outside Gwen and Lise's realism, they feel false,
cheap, and, by the end, boring.
Perhaps that's why the film's darker bits feel so half-baked.
The psychosexual implications of Lise and Gwen's relationship
(not the lesbian undertones, which make sense, but the resulting
almost-schizo sexual frenzies), Gwen's insistence on sleeping
with as many boys as possible, and Lise and Alain's (Gwen's
father, played by Pascal Elso) strangely incestuous relationship
have little place in relation to the rest of the film. They seem
designed to scandalize rather than to illustrate anything about
the girls.
When Lise tells Gwen in her most foreboding and ominous voice:
"You and me, we're just alike," it would seem to fit better in
Murderous Maids or Trouble Every Day (both, of
course, darker and more metaphorical films overall) than it does
here. There's no hint of metaphor in Girls Can't Swim,
which means lines like this play straightforwardly. It's hard to
swallow that an amazingly believable teen character would
suddenly spout intellectual horror-movie asides, especially in
an overwhelmingly realistic film. It breaks down the gorgeous
normality of Girls Can't Swim.
Girls Can't Swim loses more ground with the introduction
of its troubling absent/abusive fathers theme. Lise's father has
just died in an accident, and Gwen's father is an irresponsible
drunk, and the film partially blames the girls' sexual confusion
on their lack of solid male role models. It seems that if one
lives in a household of dominant women (Gwen's mother; Lise's
mother and older sisters) one won't know what sort of womanly
role to fulfill. As a result, Gwen's sexual liberation becomes a
cry for help rather than something empowering, and Lise's
lesbian tendencies a symptom of being a confused teen rather
than a part of her being. It's curious (and disappointing) that
a film that at first seems so concerned with feminine liberation
would resort to such conservative contrivances.
Indeed, Lise reveals that she is "ashamed by my father's death."
Gwen's experiences with smoking, boys, and sex have already put
the girls at odds, but, most importantly, her father is still
alive and adoring his rambunctious daughter. In Girls Can't
Swim a drunken lout of a father is better than no father at
all. By still having a father, Gwen betrays some unspoken code
of childish equality. The girls' codependent relationship can't
survive such a shake-up. Most hurtfully, Lise keeps her father's
death a secret, and then takes her friend's place in Gwen's
father's eyes. Here, Girls Can't Swim becomes less a
sensitive depiction of teenage girlhood and more a cheering
chorus for a traditional two-parent household: if you don't have
a father, you might also lose your friends.
The scenes that lead up to the destruction of the girls'
friendship are heavy-handed and awkward. Unresolved sexual
tension translates into white-hot rage far too predictably.
According to Girls Can't Swim, if sexual tension occurs
in a friendship it will undoubtedly lead to absolute
devastation. While it is a welcome thing to see a film about
smart and realistic teenage girls, Gwen and Lise never get the
resolution or at least self-awareness that would make their
arduous trek worthwhile. This is not to suggest that they learn
any pat moral, but a less bleak conclusion or a narrative less
focused on attempts to shock might offer hope for girls who see
themselves in Gwen and Lise's positions. Teen angst isn't the
end of the world, but Girls Can't Swim sure makes it seem
that way.
9 May 2002