High School in the Age of Social Media in “THE DUFF” (DESIGNATED. UGLY. FAT. FRIEND.)
From Kody Keplinger’s bestselling phenomenal young
adult book “The Duff” comes the movie version of the same title directed by Ari
Andel starring Mae Whitman, Bella Thorne, Robbie Amell, Skyler Samuels, Bianca
Santos and Ken Jeong that explores the perils of the high school landscape in a
world where social media is an unavoidable part of daily life.
Whitman
plays the titular role of “The Duff” as Bianca, who must navigate the pain of
being categorized, not just in private, but also in public by a mean popular
girl, Madison (Thorne) who considers Bianca inferior to her more popular pretty
friends Casey (Santos) and Jess (Samuels). The cast was keenly aware of the
importance of shining a light on this current issue in a humorous package.
Even
before the term DUFF (Designated Ugly Fat Friend) entered the high school vernacular,
there have always been unspoken differences in social circles. It seems that
everyone has friends who are more attractive, smarter, or more talented at some
point in their lives, as well as friends who are not as attractive, smart or
talented. The reality is that everyone
is a DUFF and everyone has a DUFF, and nowhere is that more pronounced than in
high school.
“The
idea of doing a coming of age film that also deals with bullying, which is
really in the zeitgeist right now with everything happening on the internet,
and how pervasive social media is in high school life, really intrigued me
actually,” says Sandel.
“Texting
and all this stuff, it’s a whole new ballgame as far as bullying, and it’s
rampant,” says Whitman. “It’s rampant
everywhere in America right now. There’s this whole mentality of ripping other
people down. And it sort of is perpetuated on the internet so I think it’s a
cool new twist to be illuminating how horrible that stuff is, because it’s
really bad.”
“The
added thing of course is the fact that kids are now texting,” says actress
Allison Janney who plays Dottie as Bianca’s mom. “And there’s Twitter and putting things up on
YouTube. I can imagine the possibility for public humiliation is just
enormous.”
In
the film, a personal moment of Bianca’s gets recorded and is quickly
disseminated through social media, exposing something that should have gone
unobserved to the entire school.
Whitman
hopes the movie will illuminate the bigger issue of everyone’s tendency to compare
and create limitations that hold us back.
She says, “If you walk out of the theater and for even five minutes feel
a little bit less trapped by your perceptions of yourself, then the movie is a
success.”
“The
Duff” opens April 15 in cinemas nationwide from Pioneer Films.
The ONLY part that I really didn’t like was the speech that Bianca gives Wesley at the end of the movie. SUPER CHEESY! But far from a deal breaker! Other than that, I found this movie to be exactly what I was hoping it would be: ENTERTAINING!
ReplyDelete