Emil Reinke and Zoe Moore star in Max Minsky and Me |
"You don't have to understand the world. You just have to find your place in it."
– attributed to Albert Einstein
In an era when films for and about adolescents have a rough time navigating the divide between Disney animated movies (strong though films like Frozen might be) and apocalyptic and pseudo-gothic fare like The Hunger Games and the Twilight films, it is always a special delight when a movie offers a sincere look into the lives of young adults. Max Minsky and Me (2007, Max Minsky und ich in German) is just such a movie. One of the few feature films of German filmmaker Anna Justice, Max Minsky and Me offers a well-crafted and often delightful story about the frustrations and joys of young adulthood, set in contemporary Berlin. Based on Holly-Jane Rahlens' award-winning novel Prince William, Maximillian Minsky, and Me (set in 1997, published in 2002) and adapted for the screen by the novelist herself, Max Minsky and Me stars Zoe Moore as Nelly Sue Edelmeister, a bookish Jewish girl who is more interested in astronomy than her imminent bat mitzvah, and Emil Reinke as Max, the sullen, slightly older boy that Nelly coerces into coaching her in basketball. The two teens could not be more different – but as the story unfolds, it is clear that they find in one another precisely what they need.
Told exclusively from the perspective of the two young characters, the film has all the awkwardness and charm of adolescence. Both characters are sharply realized, and Moore and Reinke are more than capable of anchoring the movie. Nelly is a dreamer: she dreams of the stars, of her bright future as an astronomer, and of the dreamy 17-year-old Prince Edouard of Luxembourg – a crown prince who also appears to share her passion for astronomy. When she learns that her school will be sending their girls basketball team to an international tournament hosted by the young Prince, she knows that she has to be on that trip. There is however one problem: sports is the one thing that she doesn't excel at. Add to that the fact that since she skipped a grade she is both younger and shorter than any girl in her grade, and this might be a problem that even brilliant Nelly can't solve. Enter Maxmillian Minsky, son of the glamorous owner of the cafe where Nelly's hipster/jazz musician father plays trumpet. Max has been having his own challenges – adapting to his parents' recent divorce and move to Berlin – and his reaction has largely been to withdraw into apathy behind locked bedroom doors, and play basketball by himself. Nelly offers him a deal he can't refuse: train her for the basketball tryouts and she'll 'help' him with all the homework he has no interest in doing. They meet every day after school, and slowly learn that neither is what they appear to be.
Adriana Altaras and Monica Bleibtreu in Max Minsky and Me |
The plot involving Nelly's conniving to get Max to help her
may be entirely out of the teen romantic comedy handbook (misrepresentation,
concealed motives, and the eventual hurt feelings when all is by necessity
revealed), but Justice's execution feels decidedly original, not least because
those rom-com tropes are neatly reversed, both by type and gender. (Here it is
the girl/nerd whose unthinking manipulations hurt the feelings of the
boy/jock.) But more than that, the script itself, which follows the essential
narrative of the novel, knows that the best stories, especially those aimed at
younger audiences, show rather than tell. Some of the film's original elements
demonstrate the strength of Rahlens' adaptation of her own story from the page to a visual medium.
For example – a feature which does not appear in the novel, and which is one
of the film's more beautiful elements – Max has an underground clubhouse/hiding
place beneath his mom's cafe, replete with an epic subterranean landscape.
Nellie's inner life is beautifully represented with vivid colours, swirling
stars, swelling music, and providing Max with a parallel, and importantly
inverted, inner life radically enriches the film's themes, while preserving the
generally sincere realism of the story.
In the end, both Nelly and Max enter the world on their own
terms, and Nelly's evolution from keen observer of human life to genuine
participant is poignantly represented with a light touch and often with
surprising subtlety. Anna Justice seems
to have spent most of her career working for German television, but if Max Minsky and Me is any indication,
she should step into feature films more often.
Next Sunday February
16 (4pm and 7:30pm), the Toronto Jewish Film Society is screening Max Minsky and Me at
the Miles Nadal JCC in downtown Toronto. I will be on hand to introduce and
lead a Q & A on the film.
– Mark Clamen is a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and popular culture.
– Mark Clamen is a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and popular culture.
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