This I Am Not Okay With This review contains no spoilers.
Somewhen between Carrie White, Kitty Pryde and Buffy Summers, adolescent girls and superpowers became a winning combination. All those hormones, all that loneliness and rage, all that feeling like a mutant and being terrified/thrilled by burgeoning sexuality… it’s a metaphor-a-palooza that hasn’t gone unexploited, especially not on screen.
The Craft, Ginger Snaps, Jennifer’s Body and countless others all make the wry point that high school is hell and best friends/parents/quarterbacks can be demons. They also make the more inspiring point that teenage girls – a group doubly disenfranchised by age and gender – have power. Inside them is the strength to fight back, protect others and rain down vengeance on the unworthy, if they can learn to control it.
I Am Not Okay With This, a new eight-episode Netflix comedy-drama adapted from Charles Forsman’s self-published serialized comic, picks up that mantle with the story of Sydney Novak. Played by Sophia Lillis, Syd’s a 17-year-old Pennsylvania high school student self-described as a “boring white girl.” She’s not special, she tells us, but she’s okay with that.
Through Syd’s sardonic Dear Diary voiceover, we meet her mother and younger brother (Kathleen Rose Perkins and Aidan Wojtak-Hissong), best friend Dina (Sofia Bryant) and oddball neighbour Stan (Wyatt Oleff). We learn that Syd has started to manifest mysterious powers at moments of intense stress, and that her troubles started long before that.
Lillis, seen recently in It and Sharp Objects playing younger versions of Jessica Chastain and Amy Adams roles, makes a terrific lead. The part asks a lot of her and she delivers. As Syd, she’s enjoyably disaffected and appealingly goofy. Oleff, Lillis’ co-star in both It movies, is also funny and charismatic as Stan. Bryant is luminous as Syd’s bestie, and Lillis’ on-screen chemistry fizzes with them both.
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At this point, you might bring up the words Stranger and Things and you’d be justified. That show (also produced by Shawn Levy) is also a crosshatch of retro influences, but it works because it quotes them inside a universe that has its own identity. The same goes for director Jonathan Entwistle’s previous Forsman adaptation, The End Of The F***ing World, which made something new from its obsession with cinematic Americana simply by transporting it to England. I Am Not Okay With This’ short first season (eight episodes, some just 16 minutes long) leaves itself barely any time to establish a mythology or make its viewers feel anything much. It’s cool-looking, but underneath that? Looking good doesn’t get you so far when your most memorable imagery is borrowed from elsewhere.
Even the time period is borrowed. Judging by the characters’ smartphones, it’s set around now but the clothes, cars, technology, music and locations are all 1980s tribute acts (Stan dresses like Ferris Bueller, dances like Ducky and listens to Prefab Sprout on cassette tapes, while the school dance plays Aztec Camera, Roxette and Echo And The Bunnymen).
But likable and capable as the cast are, the overall effect is slight. It feels like eating in a John Hughes theme restaurant. And if you’ve ever been to a theme restaurant, you might have enjoyed the décor, props and pun-filled menu, but you certainly didn’t go for the quality of the food.
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I Am Not Okay With This comes to Netflix on Wednesday, February 26.