The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012) Review

By John Delia   X Formly Known as Twitter
3 Min Read
Films about teens are scarce in 2012 so other than Hunger Games that came out in March the pickings have been thin for that genre.  With the teen movie Perks of Being a Wallflower opening in a very slow month mostly devoted to horror flicks, hopefully it won't be overlooked as its pretty darn good. Able to touch a finger to the pulse of what makes teens tick, this film has all the trappings of a possible adolescent box-office coup.
 
Other things going for the movie include the young and beautiful Emma Watson's first lead screen appearance since Harry Potter, the handsome Logan Lerman (D'Artagnon in The Three Musketeers) and upcoming 19-year-old  Esra Miller (City Island) all totally eye appealing and potential heartthrobs.  In addition to this very fine lead cast Dylan McDermott (The Campaign), Kate Walsh (TV's Private Practice), Paul Rudd (I Love You Man), and Melanie Lansky (Ever After) work hard in support.
 
Well the cast is defiantly worthy, but how about the plot? The film has the fortunate appeal of being based on a million copy best-selling young adult novel by Stephen Chbosky for starters.  So most teens will already know the story, have probably related to the characters and most likely want to see the film of the book acted on the big screen. Parents of teen children should certainly view the film to get some keen insight into the inner sanctum of today's adolescent lifestyles.
 
Socially shy Charlie (Lerman) enters Mill Grove High School as a freshman after moving into the neighborhood.  He's got a lot NOT going for him, in addition to his shyness and a stranger to the middle school kids moving up to the big show, as he's as he's trying to ditch some past bad memories.  A gifted learner and lover of books, Charlie tries to fit in with the fast moving younger pack, but they're too busy trying to get accepted themselves. His sister even deserts him when she gets accepted into a click.
 
One day Charlie gets introduced to Patrick (Miller), a senior and the center of the football team's gay jokes, who gets him out to a football game and invites him to a party at his house.  At the party he spots Patrick's half sister Sam (Emma Watson) for whom he already has a mini-crush after seeing her in his English class. The party people start to draw Charlie out of his shell and he gets more comfortable with his fellow students. When Patrick and Sam take him under their wings, an unusual coming of age story unfolds.
 
Perks of Being a Wallflower tends to take on bits and pieces of some of the older scripts that came out in the 1980's like Pretty in Pink, Sixteen Candles, and The Breakfast Club that feature outcast students who want to make it into the ‘in crowd'.  But, Wallflower rises above those with the right ingredients to overshadow the teeny boppers, update relationships to today's promiscuous world and make it an intriguing misfit romance between friends.
 
Book writer, screenwriter and director Stephen Chbosky does an admirable job with his story.  Drawing a good heaping of chemistry between the three leads, his characters are likeable and loveable. They're enough to keep the film interesting, realistic and clever keeping his teen audience infatuated and amused, especially the ladies.
 
I like Emma Watson in this new kind of roll where she has to let loose some of her inhibitions and show more of her untamed side.  Under Chbosky's direction she makes her Sam uninhibited, care free and engaging.  It's a major start to becoming a more sought after actor and one that should make a lot of her future directors very happy.
 
Getting a PG-13 rating by the MPAA for mature thematic material, drug and alcohol use, sexual content including references, and a fight - all involving teens will help drive Chbosky's target audience into the theaters.   
 
FINAL ANALYSIS:  A creative unusual teen film that entertains. (B)
Cast:
Directed By:
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Running Time: 103 minutes
Distributed By: Summit Entertainment

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For more information about The Perks of Being a Wallflower visit the FlickDirect Movie Database. For more reviews by John Delia please click here.

The Perks of Being a Wallflower images are courtesy of Summit Entertainment. All Rights Reserved.


FlickDirect, John  Delia

John Delia has been on all sides of the movie business over his lifetime from writing for newspapers to film making. He has been a film critic for many years and earned his Bachelor's Degree in Journalism and Communications from the University of Florida. John is also a member of the Southeastern Film Critics Association (SEFCA) which is comprised of more than 40 journalists working in the print, radio and online media.




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