Excellent, Without a doubt!!
... View MoreVery interesting film. Was caught on the premise when seeing the trailer but unsure as to what the outcome would be for the showing. As it turns out, it was a very good film.
... View MoreExcellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
... View MoreThere are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.
... View MoreThis movie was brilliant! I think what deterred some of the other reviewers here was that they thought it was a children's movie. While it does have 13 year-old girls as the centre characters, trying to fit in and grow up in and out of their school lives, it is definitely not for children.Believe it or not, I found peculiar things like social-economics to be key parts, as the difference between Sunni and Esther is never looked at directly, but determines Sunni's character and her upset with Esther. It also looks at different types of friendships, family religion and the way we lash out at people for trivial things like *we* having hurt *them*.I didn't realise it was one of those movies that you either love or hate, but perhaps it is. A must-see, though if you're expecting a light-hearted comedy simply about fitting in, you'll be surprised - it goes into so much more depth than that
... View MoreAs soon as I read the description of "Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger" on the DVD box I wanted to rent the film. I've never seen an Australian movie about Jewish people; moreover, I've never come across very many accounts of Australian Jews. "Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger" is unusual; while there are many films that reference Bar Mitzvahs, the coming of age ceremony for Jewish boys, I can't think of any other movie that features the Bat Mitzvah, the ceremony for girls. It's very quirky, like "1966", which portrays a British boy worrying about his upcoming Bar Mitzvah ceremony and party during the summer of that year, while England was hosting the World Cup. However, while "1966" presents the Bar Mitzvah boy and his parents and their friends as multilayered individuals, Esther and her friend Sonni are the most fully realised characters in "Esther Blueburger". Esther's parents are stereotypes of the upwardly mobile but distant mother and father. The audience doesn't discover why it's so important to them to send their children to private schools. After Esther's brother claims he's been suffering from anti-Semitism at his school, he's sent to a Jewish private school, but Esther isn't asked to attend the school as well. Perhaps it's an all boys school, but I would think they would also try to protect their daughter from prejudice and find a Jewish girls' school for her. At any rate, I found Esther's brother the most interesting of all the characters aside from the two female leads; his conversion from a number obsessed nerd bordering on violent weirdo to a devout praying stickler for ritual at the dining table is very funny. I loved how he insisted on saying a blessing at the dining table and made his father cover his head with a napkin: he reminded me of many of my Jewish friends I met at school growing up in Miami.The film would have benefited from further exploring what Judaism signifies to Esther and her family; aside from their accents, the relatives at the Bat/Bar Mitzvah party are straight out of central casting for any Bar Mitzvah sequence in a Hollywood movie. The story the father tells about the bread falling schmaltz side up feels authentic at first, but alas otherwise the Jewishness is portrayed as schmaltz -- or shtick, rather. So too is Esther's journey as she tries to truly become a woman. It felt like many films and made for TV movies about girls struggling to break away from their upbringing and find their identities as adults. I smiled at Esther customising her Bat Mitzvah dress, turning the yellow embroidered ruffles into a multi layered mini dress with a halter top, and covering her white high heels with red glitter. Her makeover doesn't go much further than cosmetic. I can't see how her Swedish act would win over the public school girls and her private school fellows so quickly. Her transformation seems like a fantasy she dreams up after being emotionally shattered by the brutality of her school and the girls her mother wants her to befriend: it comes too easily, and too painlessly, aside from her split from Sonni and the loss of Sonni's mother. I agree that the nightclub scenes are too gritty; surely Esther would love to dress up for clubbing and maybe take a swig of booze but at her age would find wandering the strip and giving boys oral sex way too frightening. I take the point that she scared Sonni by behaving coarsely, but that was suggested by Esther mugging her old school friend for her raincoat. I wish I could have just walked in another school and life so smoothly, without the school ever contacting my parents or challenging me about my absence. Furthermore, it's not clear why Sonni is sent to the Ladies College once in her relatives' care."Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger" is an entertaining movie about the passage from adolescence to young adulthood, and teenage girls would certainly find much in it that they could identify with. But it doesn't travel much further than the stages usually followed by films about young girls growing up. It's a shame, because the film has the potential to be an engrossing study of how Esther and her family find new ways of fulfilling themselves and engaging with their community.
... View MoreThis film could be described as the Jewish slapstick comic version of "Looking for Alibrandi", the archetypal Australian girl growing up story. Esther, a tiny but bright 14 year old Jewish girl, is shunned by the other girls at her posh Adelaide school. Sunni, a girl from the nearby state school, takes her under her wing, as it were, and Esther starts attending Sunni's school unofficially as a Swedish exchange student. Plenty of pratfalls follow, but the story turns serious towards the finish.Danielle Catanzareti is brilliant as Esther and just about carries the film. Keisha Castel-Hughes is convincing as Sunni, as is Essi Davis as Ester's mother Grace (who seems to be channeling Bree from "Desperate Housewives" right down to her dress sense.) Tony Collette, in her brief appearance as Sunni's striptease artist mother, is OK but seems to be in the wrong movie, and the other girls at St Posh are, like the girls of St Trinians, too old and too depraved to be authentic.About half-way through Esther and her pals go nightclubbing. There are a couple of problems with this. First, no bouncer would let someone of Esther's size and youth in to a strip club, even in Adelaide. Second, Esther giving head to a teenage boy who is no more than an acquaintance, in a dingy alleyway as her friends look on, while it fits in with her attempts to be accepted, proved a bit much for some of the audience with 10-12 year old children who walked out at that stage (the film is rated "M" in Australia). This is a pity because otherwise the film is suitable for kids of about 10 years and up.There are some good comic moments, such as the massed choir of the posh school singing a heavily over-written version of the Yardbirds' "House of the Rising Sun", Esther and her geek brother Jacob's send-up of genteel family dining, and the "Esther cam" view of the Bar-Mitzvah reception. There is also a "magic realism" element which emerges occasionally such as when we are told about the school's tribes. But the ending is a bit unsatisfactory. One again a first-time writer director has been let loose with some taxpayer's money and the result is an interesting but patchy piece. There is imagination at work here and freshness, but the film doesn't draw the viewer in the way "Looking for Alibrandi" did.
... View MoreHey Hey it's Esther Blueburger is a cool flick telling the story of a young teenage girl's attempts to fit in. Esther, played wonderfully by the pixie like Danielle Cantanzariti, is trapped in a life of non-recognition by an idiosyncratic family and the lonely side of classic school yard tribal exclusion that everyone has experienced.After befriending local girl Sunni, (Keisha Castle Hughes of Whale Rider fame), Blueburger begins a double life that is both laugh out loud funny and touching as she looks for her place in the world.I saw Danielle & Keisha at the Sydney premiere and they are even cuter in person than on film. Danielle, although diminutive in size, projects large on screen & Keisha has a certain star power, especially on camera, which is undeniable. It's amazing that both Keisha (in Whale Rider) and Danielle in 'Esther' have been plucked from obscurity to give such fantastic debut performances especially seeing as both were in their early teens at the time. They are supported ably by their on screen parents (Essie Davis & Russell Dykstra) and Sunni's mum, Toni Colette who plays a character which is the anti-thesis of Esther's 'normal' parents, a source of fascination & enchantment for Esther.There's something about wanting to be in with the cool kids and the lengths we go to to do that that we all recognise. It's part of growing up and becoming the person you are. That's what makes this film funny, beautiful, and sad at the same time.This is an excellent film by first time writer & director Cathy Randall & I loved it. It's great to see talented writers and film-makers in Australia being given a chance & supported in an industry where much talent goes unnoticed and is usually substituted for 'celebrity'. It's definitely one of the better films to come out of Australia in recent years. Do yourself a favour and see this film. It's definitely not 'normal'!
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