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  Home - 13 Going On 30 review

13 Going On 30 (2004)

User Rating
62%
(130 votes)
Critic Rating
62%
(19 reviews)
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Directed by
Gary Winick

Written by
Josh Goldsmith, Cathy Yuspa

Cast
Jennifer Garner, Mark Ruffalo, Judy Greer, Andy Serkis, Kathy Baker [more]


Release Date
• USA: Apr 23, 2004
• UK: 4 Aug 2004
DVD Release Date
• R1: Aug 3, 2004
• R2: 6 Dec 2004

Budget USD 37,000,000
BoxOffice: $56.0M

Official Website:
13 Going On 30 Website

MPAA Rating
Rated PG-13 for some sexual content and brief drug references.

Running Time
1 hour, 38 minutes

Country USA

Studio Gina Matthews Production, Revolution Studios, Roth/Arnold Productions

More info on IMDb.com

Other Titles
• 13 Going On 30 (2004)
• Suddenly 30



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Review of 13 Going On 30 (2004) by Karina Montgomery

13 Going on 30
Matinee and Snacks

You know by the bouncy "Head over Heels" theme that this will be a

movie that makes you grin, but who would have thought you might also

have not one but two good cries during it as well!  All the XY 

chromosomes out there are shriveling up at the thought of it, and I

don't blame them, but hear me out. You've seen the preview, which

mostly makes the movie look like a distaff Big; a girl in a woman's

body loose on the town with a credit card and a slammin' body.

However, the real plot owes more to Sliding Doors and It's A

Wonderful Life than to that Tom Hanks transformation classic. And

the preview does not credit the 13 year-old version of Jenna Rink

(Christa B. Allen) with the strength of her performance.

The characters are well-drawn, and the young/old casting is superb.

Young Jenna and her best friend Matt (Jack Salvatore, Jr.) have to

handle most of the character exposition, since grown up Jenna

(Jennifer Garner) awakens in her own adulthood with no memory of the

life that brought her to that point. She cannot tell us herself who

her character is, since she does not know either. As a result, any

caring you feel for these grown up people and specifically Jenna,

rests on Allen and Salvatore's slender shoulders. It's a risky bit

of writing that is well paid by their performances.

The theme is not so much "keep your youthful outlook" (though it

clearly is the road to a more joyful life) as "make good choices."

Some people learn from experience - adult Jenna, bereft of any memory

of what got her to this 30 year old self's life and position, must

listen to her gut and run on pure intuition. And relying on the

innocent id of her only remembered self (at age 13), free of any

super-ego, frees her to make the right choices. What, did you think

she would start a nuclear war?

Judy Greer is great as the adult colleague and best friend of Jenna,

offering tantalizing clues to her and us about Jenna's current

persona. Jenna's whole adult character is built solely, snippet by

snippet, on other characters' endowing her. Then Garner herself

shines as a sweet, ebullient, underdog of a 13 year old reveling in

her new life.

Best friend Matt grows up to be sweet artistic type Mark Ruffalo, and

he's not a love interest and he's not a foil to show her character's

nature, he is a touchstone and a wonderful character, and the source

of the best movie cry I have had in ages.  The first cry of the film 

may have had an assist by Billy Joel, but the second one is a really

good one. Gents, show your sensitivity and bring your lady friends.

If you're lucky, she'll say Matt reminds her of you. Let's not

forget Andy "Gollum" Serkis as boss Richard - his dry British

snarkiness is a lovely balance to Garner's all-American girl charm

and Greer's Manhattan edge.

Most rewarding of all was seeing a gaggle of tweens exiting the

theatre with the same satisfied giggles and smiles as myself and my

30-something companion. We had a moment, the seven of us, and it was

good. It's a fluffy movie with a surprising number of rewarding

layers, if you are willing to give it a chance.

-- 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

These reviews (c) 2004 Karina Montgomery. Please feel free to

forward but credit the reviewer in the text. Thanks. You can

check out previous reviews at:

http://www.cinerina.com and http://ofcs.rottentomatoes.com - the

Online Film Critics Society

http://www.hsbr.net/reviews/karina/listing.hsbr - Hollywood Stock

Exchange Brokerage Resource
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